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Silent Revolutions

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Silent Revolutions
PozeRevolutia1989clujByRazvanRotta13.jpg
Dazhdin secret service opening fire into demonstrators
Date5 September 1989 – 7 January 1990
(4 months and 2 days)
Location
Communist nations of Argis
Caused by
Goals
Methods
Resulted inViolent suppression of protests
Parties to the civil conflict

Erfur Pact

Opposition

  • Dazhdinia Federalists
  • Democratic movement
  • Colorful Union
Lead figures

Communist leaders:

  • Velaheria Aléxandar von Starinburg
  • Dazhdinia Jurij Libenskyjъ
  • SanarijaCommunistFlag.png Eisjel Estralić

Dissident leaders:

The Silent Revolutions (Dazhdin: Tihyje Revolucje; Velaharian: Sooþe Overhaul) were a series of unsuccessful peaceful revolutions, that swept through the at the time socialist nations in southern Argis of Dazhdinia, Sanarija and Velaheria. The revolutions themselves began with escalating protests, which later gained popular traction, gaining over a million protesters on the largest gatherings. The turning point of the revolutions is considered to be the evening of 24th November 1989, one day before the planned international general strike, when the army figures were given orders to open fire into the demonstrators against the demonstrators and martial law was declared, with tens of thousands of suspects being arrested in the night from 24th to 25th November and being jailed without trial in makeshift detention centers. Eventually, the martial laws were lifted between mid 1990 and early 1992.

History

Early protests

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Escalating movement

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Plans for general strike

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Military crackdown

Jurij Libenskyjъ, general secretary of the UDKP, shortly after declaring a martial law

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Changes in garniture

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Violent protests

Tanks of the central government in Gromųva, Dazhdinia, set on fire by protestors

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Arrests and detentions

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Detention centers

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Punishments

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Later incidents

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Political stabilisation

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Aftermath

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In popular culture

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