Today – The 60th anniversary of the 1956 Hungarian Revolution

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According to the government’s official website, on 23 October 1956, the revolt against Soviet occupation and Communist repression began as a demonstration of university students in Budapest.
After the student demonstrations, hundreds of thousands outside the Parliament listened to Imre Nagy’s speech in which he promised reforms. A bloody fusillade was shot into the unarmed crowd at the building of the Hungarian Radio, which resulted in an armed uprising by the evening. The protesters tore down the Stalin Monument – the symbol of the Communist dictatorship – on the Dózsa György Road, and occupied the building of the Hungarian Radio by dawn.
Although in the following days the legally formed government of Imre Nagy took the first steps towards democratic transition, and the negotiations over the withdrawal of Soviet forces also commenced, on the 4th November the Russian tanks started to advance in the direction of the capital without any declaration of war. By about November 10 the much more significant soviet force defeated the resisting armed civilian insurgents. Fearing reprisal, hundreds of thousands fled the country, but even so, the Kádár regime imprisoned thousands of people, and several hundred freedom fighters were executed.
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