Samashki


Samashki is a rural locality in Achkhoy-Martanovsky District, Chechnya.

Administrative and municipal status

Municipally, Samashki is incorporated as Samashkinskoye rural settlement. It is the administrative center of the municipality and is the only settlement included in it.

Geography

Samashki is located on the left bank of the Sunzha River. It is north of the town of Achkhoy-Martan and west of the city of Grozny.
From the north, the hills of the Sunzhensky ridge reach the village, and from the south, the Samashki Forestry and the Sunzha River.
The nearest settlements to Samashki are Raduzhnoye in the north-east, Zakan-Yurt in the east, Novy Sharoy in the south, Davydenko in the south-west, and Sernovodskoye in the west.

Name

The name of the village comes from the Саь-Маӏашка, which translates roughly as "the place of deers".

History

Samashki was founded in 1851, as a part of the Sunzhensky Cossack line, on the site of the destroyed Chechen village of Lower Samashki. Later, on Order number 01721, the entire Cossack population of the village was evicted. The village was then given back to the Chechens, who repopulated it.
In 1944, after the genocide and deportation of the Chechen and Ingush people and the Chechen-Ingush ASSR was abolished, the village of Samashki was renamed and settled by people from other ethnic groups. From 1944 to 1957, it was a part of the Novoselsky District of Grozny Oblast.
In 1958, after the Vaynakh people returned and the Chechen-Ingush ASSR was restored, the village regained its old name, Samashka.

Samashki in the Chechen Wars

During both Chechen Wars the village suffered greatly from the hostilities, most notably in the notorious April 1995 incident known as Samashki massacre which resulted in the deaths of more than 100 to 300 civilians.
In March 1996 another attack on the town took the form of a full-scale assault with apparent disregard for the civilian lives; according to Human Rights Watch, Russian forces used civilians as a human shields on APCs. Reports suggested some 500 civilians were killed altogether in the result of the April 1995 and March 1996 attacks. The next month, Russian journalist Nadezhda Chaikova, who had filmed the effects of the 1996 attack, was killed execution-style in Chechnya.
A devastating artillery and rocket attack on Samashki took place in October 1999 at the beginning of the Second Chechen War, despite the demilitarization of the village, killing or injuring dozens of residents on the day of October 27, 1999 alone, according to HRW. At the time, the deputy commander of the North Caucasus Military District announced that there were only "bandits and terrorists" in Samashki, but a report for the British parliament claimed civilians were killed in revenge for the heavy casualties suffered there by Russian forces during the first war.
Federal forces reported a large-scale operation in Samashki in May 2000.

Population

According to the results of the 2010 Census, the majority of residents of Samashki were ethnic Chechens, with 12 people coming from other ethnic backgrounds.

Teips

Members of the following teips live in Samashki:
The R217 federal highway "Caucasus" passes south of the village. Also, a railway line from Nazran to Grozny passes through the village. Part of the village is located beyond the railway.