Groznensky Rabochy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

TypeWeekly newspaper
Editor-in-chiefMusa Muradov (1991-92, 1994-2001)
Founded1917
LanguageRussian
Groznensky Rabochy
TypeWeekly newspaper
Editor-in-chiefMusa Muradov (1991-92, 1994-2001)
Founded1917
LanguageRussian
Ceased publication2001
HeadquartersGrozny (1917-99); Nazran (1999-2001)

Groznensky Rabochy (Russian: Грозненский рабочий) was a Russian weekly newspaper based in Grozny, Chechnya from 1917 to 1992, and from 1994 to 2001.

During the Soviet Era, Groznensky Rabochy was then controlled by the Communist Party. After the 1991 dissolution of the Soviet Union, Grozny native Musa Muradov became the paper's editor-in-chief. However, Dzhokar Dudayev, president of Chechnya's new, unrecognized secessionist government, soon attempted to make the paper an official publication of his party, and Muradov and most of his staff quit.[1] Muradov briefly fled the violence of the First Chechen War with his family, but unable to find work in Moscow, returned to restart the paper in 1995.[1]

Refounding

Recognition

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI