Steplag


Steplag or Stepnoy Camp Directorate, Special Camp No. 4 , Особлаг was an MVD special camp for political prisoners within the Gulag system of the Soviet Union. It was established on February 28, 1948, on the base of the Spasozavodsky POW camp near Karaganda, Kazakhstan. In May 1948 it was moved to Jezkazgan. In 1956, Steplag was disestablished, and its camps were transferred to the administration of the Kazakh SSR.

History

Main works were construction works, copper and coal mining, but various odd jobs as well.
Initially it was planned for 10,000 inmates, but it was expanded with more subcamps and at its height it held about 28,000 in 1950.
Between May and June 1954, the Kengir uprising occurred in Steplag.

Detainees by nationality

Detainee statistics by nationality:
No.NationalityNumber%No.NationalityNumber%
1Ukrainians9 59646,36 %18Turkmens760,38 %
2Lithuanians2 69013,0 %19Ingush people560,27 %
3Russians2 66112,86 %20Chinese550,27 %
4Latvians1 0745,19 %21Tajiks540,26 %
5Belarusians8784,24 %22Koreans520,25 %
6Estonians8734,22 %23Kyrgyz people500,24 %
7Polish people3791,83 %24Japanese people300,14 %
8Germans3591,73 %25Romanians240,12 %
9Kazakhs2911,40 %26Greeks210,10 %
10Moldovans2081,0 %27Udmurts200,10 %
11Uzbeks2040,99 %28Iranian peoples180,09 %
12Jews1740,84 %29Finns und Karelians160,08 %
13Armenians1540,74 %30Bashkirs90,04 %
14Georgians1320,64 %31Pashtuns80,04 %
15Tatars1270,61 %32Turkish people80,04 %
16Chechens1240,60 %33Mongols20,01 %
17Azerbaijanis1080,52 %34Other1670,81 %

Notable inmates

  • Alexander Dolgun, US embassy clerk falsely accused of espionage; author of the memoir Alexander Dolgun’s Story: An American in the Gulag.
  • Vladimir Efroimson, Soviet geneticist
  • Metropolitan Ioann, Ukrainian Orthodox minister
  • Tatiana Okunevskaya, Russian actress
  • Maria Kapnist, Ukrainian actress