Beginnings: issues 1–27 (1968–72) In honor of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the
United Nations declared 1968 as the "International Year for Human Rights". In April
Natalya Gorbanevskaya compiled the first issue of the
Chronicle of Current Events. Its cover (dated 30 April 1968) carried the title: "The International Year for Human Rights in the Soviet Union" and, like every subsequent issue of the
Chronicle, quoted the text of Article 19 of the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights: , issue 15 (31 August 1970) The issue reported on the trial of the Social Christian Union in Leningrad and already carried information from the camps. Its main focus, however, was the trial of Galanskov and Ginzburg in Moscow. She was released, but again arrested in 1970 and put on trial. Under pressure from KGB General Yaroslav Karpov, Yakir and Krasin agreed to appear on Soviet television, recant their past activities, and urge their fellow activists to stop the publication of the
Chronicle. They also passed on the KGB threat that, for every issue published after the broadcast, there would be an arrest. who occasionally assisted in typing up manuscripts for the journal. As a reaction to the new situation, the
Chronicle editors prefaced Issue 28 (31 December 1972) with a declaration stating that they had decided to resume publication because they found the KGB ultimatum to be "incompatible" with "justice, morality and human dignity". This declaration would not be made public for another 16 months, however. After some discussion those closely involved in the production of the journal decided to change the periodical's established policy of anonymity, to the extent of naming themselves as distributors: they did not then or subsequently admit to being authors and editors of the
Chronicle. To undermine the
blackmailing tactics of the KGB they agreed to circulate a declaration acknowledging their personal responsibility for the periodical's circulation when they issued the delayed issues of the
Chronicle: No. 28 (31 December 1972), No. 29 (31 July 1973), and No. 30 (31 December 1973). Unlike other groups, for example, the dissident
Action Group on Human Rights in the USSR, previous editors of the
Chronicle had never openly linked their names to the samizdat text. In taking this step, Kovalyov, Velikanova and Khodorovich hoped to make it more difficult for the authorities to implicate others. On 7 May 1974, they invited foreign correspondents to a press conference at which issue Nos. 28, 29 and 30 were openly distributed. At the same event Kovalyov, Velikanova and Khodorovich issued a press release. It was signed by all three of them and consisted of a few short sentences:
Publication resumes: issues 28–65 (1974–82) After the arrests and prosecutions of "Case No. 24", the
Chronicle of Current Events continued to appear several times a year, though less frequently than before. The three "distributors" who gave up their anonymity to hold the 7 May 1974 press conference and announce the resumption of the
Chronicle publication were all punished for their audacity. Sergei Kovalev was arrested in December that year. In 1975 he was put on trial and sentenced to seven years of
labor camps and three years of internal
exile for "
anti-Soviet agitation and
propaganda". Tatyana Khodorovich was forced into emigration. In 1979 Tatyana Velikanova was finally arrested and in 1980 she was prosecuted and sentenced to five years in the camps and five years' internal exile. In February 1981, issue No. 59 was confiscated in the last stages of preparation during a KGB search of the apartment of Leonid Vul, one of the
Chronicle contributing editors. As the issues grew larger, and pressure from the authorities increased, the first appearance of the
Chronicle in Moscow might come months after its formal date, e.g. Issue 63 (31 December 1981) was 230 pages long and appeared in the Soviet capital in March 1983. The final issue of the
Chronicle was dated 31 December 1982, but it was never circulated in the USSR or translated abroad. As compiling editor he had played an essential role in preparing six of the last issues of the
Chronicle. ==The editors of the
Chronicle==