The Communist Party put pressure on respected members of the Crimean Tatar community like
Mustafa Selimov to support the project, but he completely refused and said that returning to Crimea would be the only solution to their national question. Other Crimean Tatars like
Şamil Alâdin caved into the pressure and conducted agitation encouraging Crimean Tatars to move to Mubarek. Deputy Chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Uzbek SSR Georgy Orlov was chosen to meet with Crimean Tatar elites to recruit them into supporting the project.
Timur Daĝcı, the head editor of the Crimean Tatar language newspaper
Lenin Bayrağı was supportive of the project and sent his son to live in Mubarek to be an example for other Crimean Tatars. The newspaper Lenin Bayrağı] and the magazine Yıldız frequently published articles encouraging relocation to Mubarek, singing praises of the development of the project. Sources differ as to how supportive
Cherkez Ali was of the project, with some sources reporting he was extremely skeptical of the project while others report he was supportive of the project; however, there is no dispute that he did actively encourage Crimean Tatars to move to the Mubarek district. Writer and poet
Şamil Alâdin also helped promote the project after he was asked to by Georgy Orlov; he did not deny his remarks in which he said he would support the project because the party wanted it. However, he had little enthusiasm about it despite Georgy Orlov constantly trying to increase his enthusiasm for resettlement in Mubarek. Very few Crimean Tatars willingly moved to Mubarek; many were put under intense pressure to move there. Some were effectively forced to move to Mubarek after being re-deported from Crimea after attempting to return and then being only offered a residence permit in the Mubarek area. In 1983 the government tried to make all graduates of the Crimean Tatar language department of the Nizami Pedagogical Institute (which was not called a Crimean Tatar language faculty but rather called Tatlit institute due to censorship) move to the area, but they strongly protested the plan. The government never told them an official reason for demanding that all of them move to Mubarek even though there were only two job spots open for them, nor did the party answer why it was not sending any of them to cities with large Crimean Tatar populations like
Chirchiq. But in the end, it was clear that the reason that all of them were told to go to Mubarek despite most not being needed for work was to increase the population of Crimean Tatars in the district. Only a tiny fraction of the Crimean Tatar population moved to Mubarek; while the government claimed that 4,000 of them moved to Mubarek, this figure is derived from the
combination of Crimean Tatars and Volga Tatars who moved there, with the actual population of Crimean Tatars being somewhere between 1,900 to 2,000. The project was canceled shortly after the death of Sharof Rashidov, the mastermind of the project, who fell out of favor of party leadership after the cotton affair got more attention. ==Reception==