Nadir Nadirov (Kazakh: Нәдір Кәрімұлы Нәдіров, Nádir Kárimuly Nádirov; Russian: Надир Каримович Надиров; 6 January 1932 – 24 August 2021[1]) was a Kurdish engineer[2] from Kazakhstan.[3] He was born in the Nakhichevan Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic and his family was deported to Kazakhstan in 1933.[4] He was the president of association of Kurds in Kazakhstan (Berbang[5]) and the first vice-president of the Engineering Academy of Kazakhstan. He was also director of the Neft scientific center.[6] In 1992, he went public with the accounts of mass deportation of Kurds in the former Soviet Union during the 1930s and 1940s.[7]
^Прощайте Надиров Надир Каримович! (in Russian)
^Susan Meislas, Kurdistan, In the Shadow of History, s. 388, Random House, 1997, ISBN 0-679-42389-3
^"Nadir Nadirov yaşamını yitirdi". Gazete Karınca (in Turkish). 24 August 2021. Retrieved 26 August 2021.
^Susan Meislas, Kurdistan, In the Shadow of History, 388 pp., Random House, 1997, ISBN 0-679-42389-3
^GAZETA.KZ ::> Kurdish Diaspora: present and future[permanent dead link]
^The Jamestown Foundation
^Israel W. Charny, The Widening Circle of Genocide, Transaction Publishers, 1994, ISBN 1-56000-172-0, p.170
Soviet republics largely in Central Asia". Among the deported Kuds were NadirNadirov (from the Azerbaijan SSR) and Arab Shamilov (from the Armenian SSR)...
officer, chief of army (1977–1982) and defence forces (1982–1985). NadirNadirov, 89, Kazakh engineer. Norman Pender, 73, Scottish rugby union player...
Iskenderov, chairman of the Presidium of the Azerbaijan Supreme Soviet NadirNadirov, professor, member of the Kazakhstan Academy of Science and one of the...