Documentary project based on documents of the
archives of the Memorial society Moscow and of interviews with witnesses of 1993.
Director Georg
Genoux
Authors: Nana Grinstein and Alexeij
Krizhevskij.
Video: Artur Topshan
The premiere will takes place at
2015
03 of October 2013 was presented a
work in progress show at the Memorial Society.
With the participation of Oksana
Misina and Natahsa Tereshkova.
1993 Russian
constitutional crisis
The constitutional crisis of 1993 was
a political stand-off between the Russian president and the Russian parliament that was resolved by using military force. The relations between the president and the parliament had been deteriorating
for some time. The constitutional crisis reached a tipping point on September 21, 1993, when President Boris Yeltsin aimed to dissolve the country's legislature (the Congress of People's Deputies and
its Supreme Soviet), although the president did not have the power to dissolve the parliament according to the constitution. Yeltsin used the results of the referendum of April 1993 to justify his
actions. In response, the parliament declared that the president's decision was null and void, impeached Yeltsin and proclaimed vice president Aleksandr Rutskoy to be acting
president.
The situation deteriorated at the
beginning of October. On October 3, demonstrators removed police cordons around the parliament and, urged by their leaders, took over the Mayor's offices and tried to storm the Ostankino television
centre. The army, which had initially declared its neutrality, by Yeltsin's orders stormed the Supreme Soviet building in the early morning hours of October 4, and arrested the leaders of the
resistance.
The ten-day conflict became the
deadliest single event of street fighting in Moscow's history since the revolutions of 1917.[According to government estimates, 187 people were killed and 437 wounded, while estimates from
non-governmental sources put the death toll at as high as 2,000.