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310:, which he described as "plundering Chechnya by the Party leadership". Although he instantly became popular with his peers, the Soviet leadership arrested him swiftly at the age of 19, on charges of "counterrevolutionary slander", and was sentenced to ten years in prison after he had written an editorial accusing certain Party officials of "looting and corruption", but after two years Israilov was released,
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to many of
Israilov's weapons and equipment, he eluded arrest for the next ten months hiding from cave to cave as a fugitive, burdened by the weight of the deportation of his people. In a top secret communication among Soviet officers, it was reported that Israilov had been killed, his corpse
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photographed and identified on
December 29, 1944. Soviet security forces would continue to hunt the remnants of the Chechen guerrilla opposition in the North Caucasus until 1953.
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from 1940 until his death in 1944. Israilov is regarded as one of the most influential
Chechen resistance leaders during
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and his elder brother
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As a student
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in 1929, Israilov entered the ranks of the
Communist Party, and in 1933 he was sent to
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Returning to Moscow, Israilov met with other
Chechen and Ingush students, including
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in 1919. Graduating from a communist secondary school in
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Israilov was born in 1910 in the village of
Galanchozh,
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Communist
University of the Toilers of the East alumni
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In
February 1944, Israilov had managed to elude the
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363:Finland's resistance against Soviet aggression
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497:North Caucasian independence activists
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462:Chechen journalists
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280:in 1929. He joined
212:Исраил КIант Хьасан
174:Cause of death
502:Soviet journalists
482:20th-century poets
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33:verification
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452:1944 deaths
447:1910 births
441:Categories
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264:Early life
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401:. Page 57
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223:‹See Tfd›
96:June 2008
294:Moscow's
282:Komsomol
270:Chechnya
145:Chechnya
343:Siberia
323:Chechen
238:Chechen
227:Russian
208:Chechen
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426:20 May
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278:Rostov
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378:NKVD
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