How Russians Became Crimea's Largest Ethnic Group, In One Haunting Chart

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crimean tatar

AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda

A Crimean Tatar man holds the Tatar flag at a protest against the country's breakup outside Simferopol, Ukraine.

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Crimea may have a majority Russian population today, but it hasn't always been that way.

The peninsula's dark history of ethnic cleansing is visible in the following chart from Reuters.

The chart shows a collapse in the population of native Crimean Tatars from 34.1% in 1987 to zero in 1959, marking brutal harassment leading up to Soviet leader Joseph Stalin's forcible deportation of the entire population in 1944, with nearly half dying in the process. It took decades for the population to climb back to 12% by 2001.

While the population of Ukrainians and especially Russians rose, the percentage of the population falling into an unlisted category also fell from more than 20% in 1921 to around 5% in 1959. This was a consequence of the deportation also of Armenians, Bulgarians, Greeks, and other groups.

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With a history like this - and a similarly tragic history across Ukraine - it's not hard to see why many say it is unfair not to mention illegal to make Crimeans take a referendum on joining Russia.

crimea population chart

REUTERS