Political and Civil Unrest in Albanares: Difference between revisions
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| result = Local [[wikipedia:warlord|warlords]] assumed control of three Albanarian states ([[ |
| result = Local [[wikipedia:warlord|warlords]] assumed control of three Albanarian states ([[Republic of Salim|Salim]], [[Lau Clique|Lau]] and [[Dutchy of Usvonid|Usvonid]]) and declared independence in October 6 2020. |
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Revision as of 20:52, 27 February 2022
2019-2021 Albanarian Political and Civil Unrest | |||
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Part of Second Albanarian Civil War | |||
Date | 23 July 2019 (1 year, 6 months and 2 days) | – 25 January 2021||
Location | |||
Caused by | July 23 Coup. re-installation of communism in the country after 39 years. Authoritarianism. Human rights violations. Police brutality. | ||
Goals | Resignation of the Ahmet Züra-Mehdi government. Removal of immunity and resignation of Sägät Al-Veyarbazan from the Security Council. Direct elections. Return to the 1999 Constitution. | ||
Resulted in | Local warlords assumed control of three Albanarian states (Salim, Lau and Usvonid) and declared independence in October 6 2020. | ||
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The 2019-2021 Albanarian Political and Civil Unrest, also known as Bloody July, July Tragedy or even the Three Year Riots was a series of massive protests that happened in Albanares from July 23 2019 to January 25 2021 after Prime Minister Ahmet Züra-Mehdi re-installed communism on Albanares after 39 years in a coup, forcing the royal family to flee the country in 13 April 2020. The protests began peacefully in the capital, Shadaloo, and quickly spread to other cities in the country, especially the nation's largest city, Ryuji, which saw its demonstrations turn into violent riots, fueled by rising dissatisfaction with the government and economic inequality. During the year-long violent unrest and crackdowns, 555 people were killed and over 9,900 were arrested.