Grozny
is the capital of the Chechen Republic in Russia. The city lies on the Sunzha
River. According to the 2002 All-Russia population census, the city had a
population of 210,720 people (a little more than half of the population a decade
before).
In Russian
"Grozny" means "fearsome" or "terrible" (for example, the figure known in
English as "Ivan the Terrible" is called "Ivan Grozny" (Иван
Грозный)
in Russian). Chechen separatists sometimes refer to the city as Dzhokhar
or Djohar (Chechen: Djovkhar Ghaala); it was named so after Dzhokhar
Dudaev, the first president of the separatist Chechen Republic of Ichkeria. As
of December 2005, the Chechen parliament voted to rename the city Akhmadkala
after Akhmad Kadyrov, a proposition which was rejected by his son Ramzan Kadyrov,
the prime minister of the republic.
The city is
divided into four administrative city districts: Leninsky, Zavodskoy,
Staropromyslovsky, and Oktyabrsky. All of the districts are
residential,
but Staropromyslovsky district is also the city's main illegal oil drilling
area, and Oktyabrsky district hosts most of the city's
industry.
However, nearly all of Grozny was destroyed or seriously damaged during the
Chechen Wars. Grozny was also known for its
modern architecture
and as a
spa town.
It has a
university
and is home to
FC Terek Grozny.
The
Groznaya fortress was founded in 1818 as a Russian military
outpost
on the Sunzha River by Terek Cossacks and was a prominent defence centre during
the Caucasian War. After the pacification of the region, the military use of the
old fortress was obsolete and in December 1869 it was renamed to Grozny. (The
change of the name ending follows the rules for adjectives when the modified
noun was changed from the feminine gender ("threatening fortress") to masculine
("threatening town"). As most of the residents there were Terek Cossacks, the
town grew slowly until the development of Oil reserves in the early 20th
century. This spiralled development of industry and petrochemical production. In
addition to the oil drilled in the city itself, the city became a geographical
centre of Russia's network of oil fields, and also in 1893 became part of the
Transcaucasia - Russia Proper railway. The result was the population almost
doubled from 15.6 thousand in 1897 to 30.4 in 1913.
The
next day after the October Revolution (November 8, 1917), the Bolsheviks headed
by N.Anisimov seized Grozny and established a Proletariat control. As the
Russian Civil War escalated, the Proletariat formed the 12th Red Army, and the
garrison held out numerous attacks by Terek Cossacks from August 11, 1918 until
November 12. However with the arrival of Denikin's armies, the Bolsheviks were
forced to withdraw and Grozny was captured on February 4, 1919 by the White
Army. Underground operations were carried out, but only the arrival of the
Caucasus front of the
Red Army
in 1920 allowed the town to permanently end up with the RSFSR on 17 March.
Simultaneously it became part of the Soviet Mountain Republic, which was formed
on
20 January
1921,
and was the capital of the Chechen National District inside it.
On 30
November
1922,
the mountain republic was dissolved, and the national district became the
Chechen Autonomous Oblast (Chechen AO) with Grozny as capital. At this time most
of the population was still Russian, but of Cossack descent. As Cossacks were
viewed a potential threat to the Soviet nation, Moscow actively encouraged the
migration of Chechens into the city from the mountains. In 1934 the
Chechen-Ingush AO was formed which then grew into the Chechen-Ingush ASSR in
1936.
However in
1944 the whole population of Chechens and Ingush was deported after accusations
of collaboration with Nazi Germany and about 10,000 died. All traces of them in
the city, including books and graveyards, were destroyed by the NKVD troops.
Grozny became capital of the Grozny Oblast of RSFSR, and the city at the time
was again wholly Russian. In 1957 Chechen-Ingush ASSR was restored, and the
Chechens were allowed to return. Once again migration of non-Russians into
Grozny continued whilst the ethnic Russian population, in turn, moved to other
parts of the USSR, notably the Baltic states. By the late 1960s, Chechens and
Ingush outnumbered ethnic Russians.
At the same
time much development was fueled into the city. Architecture spiralled and like
in many Soviet Cities was marked in periods beginning with the Stalinist
apartments in the centre as well as administrative buildings including the
massive Council of Ministers and the Grozny University buildings. Late
construction includes the high rise apartment blocks prominent in all Socialist
cities and a city airport. In 1989 the population of the city was almost 400,000
people.
After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Grozny became the seat of a separatist
government led by Dzhokhar Dudaev. At this time of chaos, many of the remaining
Russian minority were expelled by groups of militants, adding to a harassment
and discrimination from the new
authorities.
These events are perceived by some as an act of an ethnic cleansing, although
this was never confirmed by the Russian government or the
international community.
The covert
Russian attempts of overthrowing Dudayev by a means of an armed Chechen
opposition forces resulted in a repeated failed assaults on the city. The last
one on 26 November 1994 ended with capture of 21 Russian Army
tank
crew members, secretly hired as a mercenaries by the FSK (former KGB, soon
renamed FSB); their capture was sometimes cited as one of the reasons of Boris
Yeltsin's decision to launch the open intervention. In meantime, Grozny airport
and other targets were bombed by unmarked Russian aircraft.
During the
First Chechen War, Grozny was the site of an intense battle lasting from
December 1994 to February 1995 and ultimately ending with the capture of the
city by the Russian military. Intense fighting and carpet bombing carried out by
the Russian Air Force destroyed much of the city. Thousands of combatants on
both sides died in the fighting, alongside civilians, many of which were
reportedly ethnic Russians; unclaimed bodies were later collected and buried in
mass graves on the city outskirts. The main federal military base in Chechnya
was located in the area of Grozny air base, and the Leninsky district was
location of the notorious PAP-1 "filtration camp" where Chechen suspects were
imprisoned without trial and tortured.
Chechen
guerrilla units operating from nearby mountains managed to harass and demoralize
the Russian Army by means of guerilla tactics and raids, such as the attack on
Grozny in March 1996, which aided to political and public pressure for a
withdrawal of Russian troops. In August 1996, a raiding force of 1,500 to 3,000
militants recaptured the city in a surprise attack. They surrounded and routed
its entire garrison of 10,000 MVD troops, while fighting off the Russian Army
units from the Khankala base. The battle ended with a final ceasefire and Grozny
was once again in the hands of Chechen separatists. The name was changed to
Djohar in 1997 by the President of the separatist Ichkeria republic, Aslan
Maskhadov. By this time most of the remaining Russian minority fled.
Grozny was
once again the epicenter of fighting after the outbreak of the Second Chechen
War, which further caused thousands of fatalities. During the early phase of the
Russian siege on Grozny in October 25, 1999, Russian forces launched five SS-21
ballistic missiles at the crowded central bazaar and a maternity ward,
killing more than 140 people
and injuring hundreds. During the massive shelling of the city that followed,
most of the Russian artillery were directed toward the upper floors of the
buildings; although this caused massive destruction of infrastructure, civilian
casualties were much less than in the first battles. The enormous scale of the
devastation prompted numerous comparisons with Hiroshima
and other cities leveled during World War II.
The final
seizure of the city was set in early February 2000, when the Russian military
lured the besieged militants to a promised safe passage. Seeing that there was
no build-up of forces outside, the militants agreed. During one day prior to the
planned evacuation, the Russian Army mined the path between the city and the
open the village of Alkhan-Kala and concentrated most firepower on that point.
As the result, both the city mayor and military commander both were killed; a
number of other prominent separatist leaders were also killed or wounded,
including Shamil Basayev and several hundred rank-and-file militants.
Afterwards, the Russians slowly entered the empty city and on February 6 raised
the Russian flag in the centre. The seizure was accompanied by civilian
killings, most notably the Novye Aldi massacre, and many buildings and even
whole areas of the city were systematically dynamited. A month later, it was
declared safe to allow the residents to return to their homes, although
demolishing continued for some time.
In 2003 the
United Nations called Grozny the most destroyed city on earth.
As of 2006,
the federal government representatives of Chechnya are based in Grozny. Even
though the war is officially over, political murders, bombings and clashes
between the Russian forces and the separatists continue but are becoming
increasingly sporadic. The city's central Leninsky district has acquired a
sinister reputation in 2001 as the police regularly came across bodies of
civilians, many ethnic Russians, killed for no apparent reason. In August 2002,
an entire residential area near Khankala was demolished by the military in
response to the Khankala Mi-26 disaster. On December 27, 2002, insurgent suicide
bombers destroyed the republican government complex, killing about 80 people. On
May 9,
2004,
the Chechen president Akhmad Kadyrov and several other top officials were killed
by a bomb blast in Grozny. In August 2004 at least 77 people were killed in the
night-time rebel raid on the city center.
Meanwhile,
reconstruction is underway. By June 2006, out of more than 60,000 apartment
buildings and private homes destroyed, 900 have been rebuilt. Out of several
dozens of industrial enterprises, three have been partially rebuilt - the Grozny
Machine-Building Factory, the Krasny Molot (Red Hammer) and Transmash
factories. The railway communication was restored in 2005, and Grozny's
Severny
airport was reopened in 2007 with three weekly
flights to Moscow. Most of the city's infrastructure was destroyed and many
continue to live in ruined buildings without heating and running water.