With the aid of the Russian
201st Motor Rifle Division and the
Uzbek army, the Leninabadi-Kulobi Popular Front forces routed the opposition in early and late 1992. In Kulob, Safarov's units put the biggest pressure on the opposition. In early October, the forces of the Popular Front, acting under communist slogans, tried to seize the capital, which was then controlled by the Islamist forces.
Allegations of war crimes According to
Human Rights Watch, after the Popular Front entered Dushanbe, 'they conducted a campaign of summary executions" as well as "disappearances" of people who originate from the
Pamiri and
Garmi origins. Their actions resulted in the deaths of more than 300. According to eyewitnesses, Popular Front soldiers stopped buses and trolley buses, as well as deployed forces at
Dushanbe International Airport to check peoples passports for people from these regions. On 17 October 1992, musician
Karomatullo Qurbonov and a number of his band members were murdered by gunmen from the Popular Front militia. Qurbonov was one of a number of intellectual and cultural figures murdered during the
Tajik Civil War. In 2008 a former member of the Popular Front, Mahmadahdi Nazarov, also known as Makhsum Mahdi, was convicted of Qurbonov's murder. He is also the father of the famous female singer of Tajikistan,
Noziya Karomatullo. == Notable personnel ==