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Friday, December 27, 2013

Mikhail Kalashnikov ,the creator of AK47,laid to rest

Hundreds of soldiers turn out to honour Mikhail Kalashnikov as the creator of the world's most lethal weapon is laid to rest in a new cemetery for national heroes

  • Former Russian peasant designed the AK-47 after the Second World War
  • Popular with militants, the gun is still made in his home city of Izhevsk
  • Its low price and wide production made it synonymous with mass killing
  • Inventor insisted he created it to 'defend the fatherland' of Soviet Union
  • He never wanted to design guns and would rather have built a lawnmower
  • There is one Kalashnikov for every 70 people in the world
By Dan Bloom and Suzannah Hills
Hundreds of soldiers attended the funeral of Mikhail Kalashnikov today to pay their final respects to the designer of the assault rifle that has killed more people than any other firearm in the world.
Kalashnikov, who created the AK-47 more than 60 years ago, died in hospital on Monday at the age of 94.
He was today buried with full state honours at the Federal Military Memorial Cemetery (FVMK) - a newly opened cemetery for national heroes - in Mytishchi outside Moscow, the defence ministry said.

Mikhail Kalashnikov, chief designer of AK-47, was today laid to rest with full state honours in Mytischi outside Moscow
Mikhail Kalashnikov, chief designer of AK-47, was today laid to rest with full state honours in Mytischi outside Moscow
Russian soldiers stand guard near the coffin during the funeral ceremony in Mytishchi outside Moscow
Russian soldiers stand guard near the coffin during the funeral ceremony in Mytishchi outside Moscow
In mourning: Russian President Vladimir Putin carries flowers as he pays his last respects to late Mikhail Kalashnikov
In mourning: Russian President Vladimir Putin carries flowers as he pays his last respects to late Mikhail Kalashnikov
Russian President Vladimir Putin was among the mourners at the funeral of Kalashnikov, who died on December 23
Russian President Vladimir Putin was among the mourners at the funeral of Kalashnikov, who died on December 23
Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and Deputy Defense Minister Arkady Bakhin, right, pass a portrait of Mikhail Kalashnikov
Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and Deputy Defense Minister Arkady Bakhin, right, pass a portrait of Mikhail Kalashnikov
Final respects: A military cadet stops to look at a portrait of Mikhail Kalashnikov during his funeral service
Final respects: A military cadet stops to look at a portrait of Mikhail Kalashnikov during his funeral service
Russian President Vladimir Putin, the Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, Soviet commanders and current servicemen were among the mourners at the funeral.

Kalashnikov died in hospital his home city of Izhevsk, near the Ural Mountains - where his gun is still made.
He had been ill for some time and had been in intensive care since November 17.
Kalashnikov, a Russian peasant with little formal education, designed the eponymous rifle in 1947  - with the letters AK-47 referring to 'Kalashnikov's Automatic' (Avtomat Kalashnikova) and the year of its release.
Honor guard officers carry the coffin bearing the body of Russian firearm designer Mikhail Kalashnikov
Honor guard officers carry the coffin bearing the body of Russian firearm designer Mikhail Kalashnikov
National hero: Russian soldiers stand in line to pay their last respect to Mikhail Kalashnikov, the designer of the iconic AK-47 assault rifle that was the favoured weapon of guerrillas worldwide
National hero: Russian soldiers stand in line to pay their last respect to Mikhail Kalashnikov, the designer of the iconic AK-47 assault rifle that was the favoured weapon of guerrillas worldwide
Kalashnikov was buried at the Federal Military Memorial Cemetery (FVMK) in Mytishchi outside Moscow
Kalashnikov was buried at the Federal Military Memorial Cemetery (FVMK) in Mytishchi outside Moscow
Russian soldiers walk past a gun carriage during the funeral ceremony of Mikhail Kalashnikov
Russian soldiers walk past a gun carriage during the funeral ceremony of Mikhail Kalashnikov
Deadly icon: Mikhail Kalashnikov with the weapon that made his fortune - and won him praise and condemnation. There is one AK-47 for every 70 people in the world, the deadliest weapon ever created
Deadly icon: Mikhail Kalashnikov with the weapon that made his fortune - and won him praise and condemnation. There is one AK-47 for every 70 people in the world, the deadliest weapon ever created
Soviet hero: Mikhail Kalashnikov in 1949, two years after the weapon he invented went into mass production
Soviet hero: Mikhail Kalashnikov in 1949, two years after the weapon he invented went into mass production
Legacy of death: Mikhail Kalashnikov celebrating the 50th anniversary of his weapon in 1997, with a t-shirt listing some of the conflicts in which it was intrumental
Mikhail Kalashnikov
Legacy of death: Mikhail Kalashnikov celebrating the 50th anniversary of his weapon in 1997 (top) with a t-shirt listing some of the conflicts in which it was intrumental. Bottom, at his home near the town where it is still made
Honoured: He met President Vladimir Putin just three months ago. Mr Putin expressed his 'deep condolences'
Honoured: He met President Vladimir Putin just three months ago. Mr Putin expressed his 'deep condolences'
But the rifle and its variants soon became the weapons of choice for dozens of armies and guerrilla groups around the world.
Specifically engineered to work in the harsh conditions in which Soviet troops operated, it became one of the most successful weapons ever produced and turned its inventor into one of the most lauded men in the Soviet Union.
Cheap, efficient and easily mass-produced, the gun soon became synonymous with killing on a sometimes indiscriminate scale.
It was taken up by militants as far afield as Iraq, Afghanistan, Colombia, Liberia, Sudan, Zaire and Gaza, to name a few. Osama Bin Laden was infamously pictured clutching the deadly weapon. 

Militants: Osama Bin Laden was pictured with the weapon including in this photo in June 2001
Militants: Osama Bin Laden was pictured with the weapon including in this photo in June 2001
Conflict: A Libyan rebel fighter as she heard Colonel Gaddafi's forces had been driven out of Benghazi in 2011
Conflict: A Libyan rebel fighter as she heard Colonel Gaddafi's forces had been driven out of Benghazi in 2011
In the Vietnam war (pictured) U.S. troops reportedly threw away their M-16s and took Viet Cong AK-47s
In the Vietnam war (pictured) U.S. troops reportedly threw away their M-16s and took Viet Cong AK-47s
Conflict: A Serbian worker armed with an AK-47 during the war in Kosovo in July 1998, in which thousands died
Conflict: A Serbian worker armed with an AK-47 during the war in Kosovo in July 1998, in which thousands died
Widespread: Young rebels in Liberia hold an AK-47 during the conflict with the president Charles Taylor in 2003
Widespread: Young rebels in Liberia hold an AK-47 during the conflict with the president Charles Taylor in 2003
Kongolu Mobuto, son of the former President of Zaire, in 1997 when martial law was declared in the nation
Kongolu Mobuto, son of the former President of Zaire, in 1997 when martial law was declared in the nation
Lethal tipple: A man holding alcohol and shooting an AK-47 in the air in Albania in March 1997, when 1,000 protesters gathered to respond to rumours the embattled then-President, Sali Berisha, had resigned
Lethal tipple: A man holding alcohol and shooting an AK-47 in the air in Albania in March 1997, when 1,000 protesters gathered to respond to rumours the embattled then-President, Sali Berisha, had resigned
President Saddam Hussein fires a rifle in the air as he salutes Iraqi volunteers who have offered to fight with Paleastinians against Israel troops during a military parade in Baghdad on November 20, 2000
A Palestinian militant brandishes his AK-47 rifle during a rally of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades in Balata refugee camp near the West Bank city of Nablus
Invading U.S. troops reportedly found a gold-plated Kalashnikov in one of the palaces of Saddam Hussein, top. Bottom: A Palestinian militant brandishes his AK-47 during a rally near the West Bank city of Nablus
Weaponry: Iraqi schoolboys practice firing AK-47 assault rifles at a summer military camp, Baghdad, in 2002
Weaponry: Iraqi schoolboys practice firing AK-47 assault rifles at a summer military camp, Baghdad, in 2002
Mass-produced: A Nato soldier surrounded by weapons collected from Albanian guerillas in 2001
Mass-produced: A Nato soldier surrounded by weapons collected from Albanian guerillas in 2001
Iraqi policemen hold AK-47s during a police parade in the capital Baghdad 2003. The weapon, named for its inventor and the year when it was created, was never patented in Russia so was widely copied Iraqi policemen hold AK-47s during a police parade in the capital Baghdad 2003. The weapon, named for its inventor and the year when it was created, was never patented in Russia so was widely copied

There are an estimated 100 million Kalashnikovs, one for every 70 people in the world. The gun is in official service in 55 countries and adorns the flag of Mozambique.
Its vast popularity was partly down to the fact its design was never patented, so it was widely ripped off.
This was accelerated by the Soviet Union's policy of allowing friendly countries to imitate its designs of weaponry to strengthen its position during the Cold War.
The Kalashnikov was prized for its sturdy reliability in difficult conditions.
During the Vietnam war American soldiers reportedly threw away their M-16s in the harsh jungle and took every AK-47 they could find.
The 205-year-old Izmash factory, which makes the weapon and is seen by Russians as a national icon, always complained that its potential income was hit badly by the 'pirated' versions of the designs made abroad.
But Izmash has also suffered from dwindling demand and a failure to make up for this with foreign orders - a problem plaguing many specialised post-Soviet industries.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who met Mr Kalashnikov just three months ago, expressed his 'deep condolences' over his death.
Born in a Siberian village as the 17th child of his family on November 10, 1919, Mr Kalashnikov had a tragic childhood during which his father was deported under Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin in 1930.
In October 1941 he was heavily wounded and shell-shocked in a Soviet defeat by the Germans. He reportedly first conceived of the weapon while recovering in hospital.
Despite the lethal legacy of his weapon, Russia lavished Mr Kalashnikov with honours including the prestigious Hero of Russia prize, the nation's highest honour, for designing the iconic rifle.
In 2007, president Vladimir Putin praised him, saying 'The Kalashnikov rifle is a symbol of the creative genius of our people.'
The inventor had said he had never intended for it to become the world's most popular weapon, and he fell into making it by accident.
Instead he had wanted to design farm equipment 'such as a lawnmower', he claimed.
Yet he carried on working as the chief designer at Izmash well into his 80s.
He profited little from his gun, and almost not at all before the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991. Because of the lack of patent laws he was, like the inventors of more harmless global successes like Tetris, merely a state employee.
'I created a weapon to defend the fatherland's borders,' he said during an award ceremony at the Kremlin to mark his 90th birthday.
Fame: Despite the advent of hundreds of other guns, the AK-47 by Mikhail Kalashnikov (pictured with his designs) led the pack for its hard-wearing simplicity and the ease with which it could be copied
Fame: Despite the advent of hundreds of other guns, the AK-47 by Mikhail Kalashnikov (pictured with his designs) led the pack for its hard-wearing simplicity and the ease with which it could be copied
The former Siberian peasant, pictured in 2002, continued working as a leading gun designer well into his 80s
The former Siberian peasant, pictured in 2002, continued working as a leading gun designer well into his 80s
Celebration: The ageing inventor had a complex legacy but was honoured as a Russian hero
Celebration: The ageing inventor had a complex legacy but was honoured as a Russian hero
Indirectly, Mikhail Kalashnikov leaves a bloody legacy. He claimed he would rather have invented a lawnmower
Indirectly, Mikhail Kalashnikov leaves a bloody legacy. He claimed he would rather have invented a lawnmower
'It's not my fault that it was sometimes used where it shouldn't have been. This is the fault of politicians.'
On another occasion he said: 'After the collapse of the great and mighty Soviet Union so much c**p has been imposed on us, especially on the younger generation. I wrote six books to help them find their way in life.'
There is a bronze bust of him in his native village of Kurya in the Siberian region of Altai - and it is a local tradition for newlyweds to lay flowers there.
'They whisper "Uncle Misha, wish us happiness and healthy kids," he once said. "What other gun designer can boast of that?"'
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INSTRUMENT OF MURDER: FIVE FACTS ABOUT THE WORLD'S DEADLIEST GUN


  1. Dangerous: Kalashnikovs in Colombia
    Dangerous: Kalashnikovs in Colombia
    Chile's Communist president Salvador Allende died holding an AK-47 in 1973
  2. During the Iraq war, U.S. troops found a gold-plated Kalashnikov reportedly given to Saddam Hussein's son Uday at one of the Iraqi leader's palaces in Baghdad
  3. Osama bin Laden used to hold an AK-47 in his videotaped diatribes against the West...
  4. ... But America may have inadvertently given it to him. Guns captured in Lebanon in 1982 reportedly found their way, via the CIA and the Pakistani Inter-Service Intelligence Agency, to the Mujahadeen, who were resisting the then-Soviet occupation of Afghanistan
  5. Several American mass shooters, including some at high schools, have used the weapon including recently in Georgia and New Jerse
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    100 MILLION AND COUNTING: HOW AK-47 BECAME WORLD'S DEADLIEST
The AK-47's story truly began in 1942, when Soviet soldiers siezed new-style automatic rifles from German troops.
Unlike traditional or semi-automatic rifles, they could fire a whole magazine of bullets simply by holding down the trigger, because the recoil from each shot ejected the previous cartridge.
(FILES) -- A file picture taken on July 29, 2011 shows AK 47 assault rifles seized by the Colombian police in Cali, Valle del Cauca department, Colombia
Entrenched in the conflict of the Second World War, the Soviets set to work straight away on copying the Nazis' designs.
But their first versions were clunky, weighing more than 5kg without bullets, and the task of creating a new design fell to Mikhail Kalashnikov, who had created an unsuccessful gun prototype earlier in the war.
His design mashed together the best elements of previous weapons and won a competition in 1946, going into full production the next year.
Accuracy was not its strongest point but it endured for its simplicity and reliability in even the harshest of conditions - built, as it was, in the wilds of Siberia.
It was not patented - opening the door for millions of 'pirate' versions - because of the culture which existed in the Communist state.
All ideas were property of the government, not one individual person, and pride came from helping the great Soviet army.
Source: World Guns
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