Gawriił Miasnikow
Iljicz Miasnikov (Russian: Гавриил Ильич Мясников, born 1889 in the village of Bieriozovka in the Kazan province, died November 16, 1945 in Moscow) - Russian revolutionary, journalist, chauvinist, communist criminals. Curriculum vitae
In 1900 he graduated from the 4th grade of the craft school, worked as a locksmith at a cannon factory in Perm, and in May 1905 he joined the Esser Party, which in September 1905 he appeared. In 1906, he was arrested by the tsarist authorities and sentenced to two years and eight months in prison for exile in eastern Siberia, from which he fled in 1908. In 1909 he was arrested again (under the false name of Agapit Miaczkow), 1910 again fled, in December 1910 arrested for the third time (after the false name of Nestor Popov), 1911 released from custody under police supervision, from where he ran. In 1913, arrested for the fourth time in Baku and sentenced to 6 years in prison in Orle, March 16, 1917, amnestied after the February Revolution, he returned to Perm and became chairman of the Motovilian Council and chairman of the Executive Committee of the Workers' and the division commissioner. In 1918 he was the deputy chairman of the Permian gubernian province of Chełm, performing the position at night from 12 to 13 June 1918 murdered Grand Duke Michal, brother of Nicholas II. From March to December 1920 he was the chairman of the Permian Government RKP Committee (b). On February 20, 1922, he was excluded from the Bolshevik Party, became deputy director of the armory factory in Perm, then briefly arrested by the GPU for signing the Declaration of the Workers' Opposition Twenty-Two; In the custody, he announced a hunger strike.
In May 1923, he was arrested in Berlin and secretly sent to Berlin as an oppositionist and author of the RKP Manifesto Group Manifesto (b), later working in Berlin with "leftists." In November 1923 he returned to Moscow, where he was again arrested, in custody declared a hunger strike and attempted suicide, was sentenced to 3 years in prison, spring 1927 released. After leaving prison he was sent to Eryan, where he wrote the book "The Next Fraud," and on 7 November 1928 fled to Persia, then from April 1929 to April 1930 he stayed in Turkey, later in France, where he worked as a journalist and publicist, later a factory locksmith . On June 23, 1941, he was arrested in Paris by the Gestapo; 1942 he fled to Toulouse, Germany, but he was arrested in 1943 and subsequently imprisoned in Vichy on charges of terrorism; Then he turned to the American consul to ask for his protection. He was sent to a concentration camp in the Toulouse region, where he fled in August 1943 and settled in Paris under somebody else's documents. After the liberation of Paris in August 1944 he worked as a locksmith in a factory; On January 17, 1945, however, he was arrested by the NKVD and subjected to investigation, and sentenced on October 24, 1945 by the Military College of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR to the death penalty by firing squad. Judgment was made on November 16, 1945. Posthumously, December 25, 2001 was rehabilitated by the authorities of the Russian Federation. Bibliography
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