Date | June 1941 | – November 1941
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Location | Occupied Poland, Ukrainian SSR, Byelorussian SSR, the Baltic states, Bessarabia |
Type | Summary execution, mass murder, politicide, mass shooting |
Participants | NKVD and NKGB (united 20 July 1941) |
Deaths | 100,000 |
The NKVD prisoner massacres were a series of mass executions of political prisoners carried out by the NKVD, the People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs of the Soviet Union, across Eastern Europe, primarily in Poland, Ukraine, the Baltic states and Bessarabia. After the start of the German invasion of the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, NKVD troops were supposed to evacuate political prisoners to the interior of the Soviet Union, but the hasty retreat of the Red Army, a lack of transportation and other supplies, and general disregard for legal procedures often led to prisoners being simply executed.
Estimates of the death toll vary by location; nearly 9,000 in the Ukrainian SSR,[1] 20,000–30,000 in eastern Poland (now part of Western Ukraine),[2] with the total number reaching approximately 100,000 extrajudicial executions in the span of a few weeks.[3]