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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Ibrahim_BekIbrahim Bek - Wikipedia

    Ibrahim Bek or Ibrahim Beg (Uzbek: Иброҳимбек Чакабаев, romanized: Ibrohimbek Chaqaboev; 1889 – 31 August 1931) was a leader in the Basmachi movement, a liberation movement in Central Asia, which fought against the Red Army.

  2. Ibrahim Bek led a brief resurgence of the movement when collectivization fuelled resistance and succeeded in delaying the policy until 1931 in Turkmenistan, but he was soon caught and executed. The movement then largely died out.

  3. Sep 18, 2009 · The Soviet Union nonetheless faced a serious challenge to their rule there during the early 1920s from roaming bands dubbed basmachi (bandits), of whom the most significant between 1921 and 1931 was Ibrahim Bek, the Lokai leader based in modern-day Tajikistan.

  4. Ibrahim Bek (1889-31 August 1931) was a leader of the Basmachi movement during the Basmachi Revolt of the 1920s. Ibrahim Bek was born to the Lakai tribe of Uzbeks in eastern Bukhara in 1889. He became an Islamic religious conservative, and he supported the emirs.

  5. May 9, 2008 · This article concerns the impact of the activity of Ibrahim Bek's bands on the population of Eastern Bukhara and the multifaceted Soviet reaction to it in the second half of the 1920s.

  6. At a meeting of elders in Kunduz in March 1930, the Prime Minister of Afghanistan, Mohammad Hashim Khan, on behalf of the King of Afghanistan, Mohammed Nadir Shah, who had taken power from Habibullah, again demanded that Ibrahim Bek lay down his arms.

  7. Feb 9, 2022 · Ibrahim Bek, leader of the Bukharan Basmachi, image from Wikicommons. For their part, the Basmachi focused on raiding military supply depots, burning warehouse and ginning factories, as well as attacking mines and oil wells. While the Russians tried to enforce mass arrests, they could never penetrate the Basmachi’s territory in the Ferghana.