'' sitting above the bodies of Red Ruhr Army fighters who had been shot, 2 April 1920, at
Möllen near
Duisburg On 24 March, local and national government authorities signed the
Bielefeld Agreement with the more
moderate political parties and executive councils. The agreement called for the Red Ruhr Army to hand over its weapons, with a promise of
amnesty for those who had broken the law in defence of the government against the Kapp Putsch. Leaders of the Red Ruhr Army, however, thought that it would be better to fight against the government than accept the compromises in the agreement. At a meeting a week later, on 1 April, the leaders of the Red Ruhr Army agreed that there was no point in continuing the fight, but it had by then splintered into numerous, largely independent groups over which the leaders had no control. In addition, urgent calls for help were coming in from local citizens and city administrations reporting that Red Ruhr Army members were engaging in
extortion,
looting and shootings. On 2 April, the government sent in both
Reichswehr and
Freikorps troops, who were experienced and heavily armed, into the Ruhr. The uprising was quickly crushed with
mass arrests and shootings without it always being clear whether the victims were members of the Red Ruhr Army or not. Wounded fighters were shot, as were ten female
medics with the Red Ruhr Army who were carrying
pistols. Many fighters were reported as having been shot while fleeing, indicating that they were shot in the back. Around 50 had been
summarily executed and an additional 205 condemned by
drumhead courts before the government in Berlin forbade them on 3 April. General
Oskar von Watter, who was in charge of government troops in the Ruhr, defended himself from other charges that his men had engaged in unlawful behaviour by citing a letter from the
Ministry of the Reichswehr that stated, "You are given complete freedom to do what the situation demands". in
Hagen On 5 April, a large part of the surviving Red Ruhr Army fled to the
French occupied zone of the Rhineland. The skirmish that took place in
Gelsenkirchen the next day marked the final end of the uprising and of the Red Ruhr Army. The number of insurgents killed has never been accurately determined. Historian
Heinrich August Winkler puts the number at "well over 1,000", the majority of them killed after being captured. The Reichswehr lost 208 killed and 123 missing; the Security Police 41 dead. The number of Freikorps deaths has been put at 273. ==Members==