Background At that time Osmanov became an activist, most deported peoples who had survived the "special settler" regime including
Chechens and
Kalmyks were completely allowed to return to their homeland and were not denied residence permits necessary for doing so; however, Soviet leadership did not apply the same policy for Crimean Tatars, and as a result a vast majority of Crimean Tatars were forced to remain in exile due to being unable to get a residence permits in Crimea. However, the official Soviet narrative was that the Crimean Tatars had taken root in their place of exile and had equal rights - despite not having the same rights to residence permits in their previous land of residence as other deported nations, and the claim that Crimean Tatars had "taken root" was a false; there was an overwhelming desire to return to Crimea, a theme pervasive throughout all aspects of their culture, ranging from embroidery featuring the peninsula to the mournful song
Ey Guzel Qirim. Moscow's refusal to allow a return was not only based out of a desire to satisfy the new Russian settlers in Crimea, who were very hostile to the idea of a return, but for economic reasons: high productivity from Crimean Tatar industries in Central Asia meant that letting the diaspora return would take a toll on the industrialization goals of Central Asia. Historians attribute Chechen resistance to confinement in exile to Khrushchev's support of allowing them to return, while the non-violent Crimean Tatar movement did not lead to any desire from the government of the
Uzbek SSR for Crimean Tatars to leave. In effect, the government was punishing Crimean Tatars for being
Stakhanovites while rewarding the deported nations that contributed less to the building of socialism, creating further resentment.
Political activities in the Soviet Union In January 1968 Osmanov faced his first arrest for distributing documents stating grievances of Crimean Tatars and demanding full rehabilitation, for which he was sentenced to two and a half years in a high-security penal labour colony at the Kyzylkum gold mine. Upon release he began working at a glass factory in Azerbaijan as an engineer before returning to Fergana in 1972; there he worked at a nitrogen fertilizer factory and later at the Giprovodkhoz Institute, all while continuing to remain politically active. One of the projects of his activism was an evaluation of the extent of the losses to the Crimean Tatar people caused by the deportation. From 1973 to 1974 he and his father worked on conducting a census of deported Crimean Tatars in Central Asia, in which they estimated that the real number of Crimean Tatars deported in 1944 was well above 200,000. The
KGB insisted that the mortality rate of deported Crimean Tatars was "only" around 22% in the first few years of exile, but the Osmanov census showed a figure of around 46%, which led to him concluding that the government downplayed the death toll of Crimean Tatars. After compiling the census and evaluating the losses, he created a list of seven grievances against Soviet policy that he sent to the central government of the USSR as well as the UN. On 1 December 1982 he was arrested for distributing a series leaflets describing Crimean Tatar mistreatment in the Soviet Union, for which he was charged "defaming the Soviet system"; his samizdat works that led to his arrest included a leaflet titled "Genocide-Israeli style" that compared the treatment of Crimean Tatars by the USSR and
Palestinians by Israel. Subsequently, he served three years in a high-security labor camp in Yakutia, and then three days before his scheduled release he was forcibly taken to the Blagoveshchensk psychiatric hospital, where he was detained for another two years and subject to
punitive psychiatry. While in prison, his father, one of the few who was allowed to return to Crimea, died. At the funeral, which had intense KGB surveillance, he was buried next to
Musa Mamut, who had committed
self-immolation in protest of being forced to leave Crimea. Yuri was released in September 1987 during perestroika and returned to activism. Earlier that year in July,
a state commission was created to consider and evaluate the request for the right of return, chaired by
Andrey Gromyko. Gromyko's condescending attitude and failure to assure them that they would have the right of return ended up concerning members of the Crimean Tatar civil rights movement. In June he rejected the request for re-establishment of a Crimean Tatar autonomy in Crimea and supported only small efforts for return, while agreeing to allow the lower-priority requests of having more publications and school instruction in the Crimean Tatar language at the local level among areas with the deported populations. Gromyko's eventual conclusion that "no basis to renew autonomy and grant Crimean Tatars the right to return" triggered widespread protests.
Anatoly Lukyanov from the commission had pointed out that other nations deported in the war were allowed to return, and noted that the case of the
Kalmyks, who were deported less than a year before the Crimean Tatars for the same official reason but allowed to return to Kalmykia in the 1950s. Kalmyk collaboration with the Germans in the war was not used as a reason to treat Kalmyk civilians as second-class citizens in the 1980s, since by then they had become effectively rehabilitated, while the treatment of Crimean Tatars as second-class citizens at the time was often justified by reiterating the same official talking points about their alleged actions in World War II. Less than two years after Gromyko's commission had rejected their request for autonomy and return,
pogroms against the exiled
Meskhetian Turks were taking place in Central Asia. During the pogroms, some Crimean Tatars were targeted as well, but Osmanov played an active role in de-escalating the conflict and protecting local Crimean Tatar communities from attackers. After the pogroms, it became clear to the leadership of the USSR that Crimean Tatars and Meskhetian Turks had not fully assimilated into Central Asia as intended, and a second commission led by
Gennady Yanaev was established to reconsider Crimean Tatar demands in June 1989. In November the military adopted the resolution "On the Recognition of the Repressive Acts Against Peoples Subjected to Forced Displacement and Ensuring their Rights", which was based on the draft "Declaration on the Crime and Wrongfulness of State Acts Against Peoples Victimized by Deportation." On 14 December 1989 the Supreme Soviet declared the deportation to have been illegal, and in 1990 Osmanov was appointed the acting chairman of the State Committee for Deported Peoples in the Crimean Regional Executive Committee. There, he managed to get the leadership of the Central Asian republics and Crimea to permit the full return and was granted funding to support returning people. He held the post until March 1991. Longstanding disagreements between followers of Osmanov and
Dzhemilev became more apparent during the perestroika era. While the goal of Osmanov's Fergana faction, which later became the NDKT (Russian: НДКТ, Национального движения крымских татар) was to conform within the Soviet system was the restoration of the Crimean ASSR under the Leninist principle of national autonomy for titular indigenous peoples in their homeland, the Dzhemilev faction, at the time under the banner of the
OKND, which later became the
Mejilis, wanted the creation of an independent Crimean Tatar state. Osmanov was very afraid that the more radical OKND would exacerbate already-strained ethnic tensions in Crimea, with
Tatarophobia being widespread and the OKND claiming more and more land in Crimea instead of trying to take more reconciliatory measures. The mainstream Soviet dissident movement was very critical of Osmanov for wanting to work within the Soviet system to restore the Crimean ASSR instead of broadly opposing communism. Soviet dissident
Leonid Plyushch called Osmanov as a "convinced marxist" Prominent Soviet dissidents like
Andrey Sakharov and
Petro Grigorenko sided with the much more aggressive OKND faction. Osmanov always dissented against the Dzhemilev-led wing of the Crimean Tatar rights movement for being too aggressive. ==Later years and death==