[38 + 1 = 39] including nine trials (3 for Mustafa Dzhemilev, 2 for Reshat Dzhemilev)
*
1968 — CCE 2.4, CCE 5.1 [16, 17]
1969 — CCE 6.6, CCE 7.1 (Bayev), CCE 7.7, CCE 8.5, CCE 8.14 [11], CCE 9.2 (Tashkent), CCE 10.13 [2, 21], CCE 11.14 [14, 15]
1970 — CCE 12.3 (Gabai & M. Dzhemilev 1), CCE 13.10 [12], CCE 14.11 [7], CCE 14.12 [7]
1972 — CCE 23.7 [1], CCE 25.9 [1, 2], CCE 27.4
== (1973) -;
1974 — CCE No. 31 [1]: CCE 31.1 (Akimov), CCE 31.2 (R. Dzhemilev 1), CCE 31.3, CCE 31.9 (Zaporozhe); CCE 32.9-1, CCE 32.9-2, CCE 34.11
1976 — CCE 39.6, CCE 40.3 (M. Dzhemilev 2), CCE 40.11, CCE 41.9, CCE 42.7, CCE 43.11
1978 — CCE 48.14-1, CCE 48.14-2, CCE 48.14-3; CCE 49.12, CCE 51.13
1979 — CCE 52.9-1, CCE 52.9-2; CCE 53.2 (M. Dzhemilev 3), CCE 53.22-1, CCE 53.22-2; CCE 54.17, CCE 55.1-2 (Reshat Dzhemilev 2)
1980 — CCE 60.2 (Lavut trial); cce 60.11
(1981-1982) -.
==========================================
NOTES
See also Part IV “Individual Streams”, 12: The Crimean Tatars (pp. 249-270) in Peter Reddaway’s Uncensored Russia (London, 1972).
*
- When the Chronicle resumed publication in 1974 one entire issue (CCE No. 31) was devoted to the Crimean Tatar movement. The editor, in all likelihood, was Alexander Lavut.
↩︎
================================