Iivo Ahava

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Iivo Ahava
Russian Imperial Army)
Lieutenant (Royal Navy
)
Battles/wars

Iivo Ahava (born Afanasev; 19 February 1896 – 16 April 1919) was a

North Russia Intervention, Ahava served as a lieutenant in the British organized units of Murmansk Legion and Karelian Regiment. He was murdered in unclear circumstances in East Karelia.[1]

Life

Early years

Ahava was born in the

Cross of St. George. After the 1917 February Revolution, Ahava returned to Finland and served with the Russian troops in Oulu.[3]

Finnish Civil War

Following the start of the Finnish Civil War in January 1918, the Whites took control of the northern part of the country. Ahava fled to

Soviet Russia and formed a Red Guard unit in Kandalaksha. The 1,000-man unit was composed of Finnish lumberjacks working in East Karelia and of the Reds who had fled from the Finnish Lapland. From 23 March to 18 April, Ahava fought against the Finnish Whites who had launched their Viena expedition to annex parts of East Karelia into the newly independent Finland. Ahava opposed their plans and supported an independent East Karelia.[4]

Ahava's position as a Red Guard leader was complex as his family members had joined the Whites. His father Paavo traveled around as a commissioner, brother Paavo junior served in one of the Viena expedition's reconnaissance units and the sister Veera was a nurse in the staff of colonel

The Reds were able to stop the Whites, and Ahava was also eager to attack their rear in the northern Finland. However, the Red Guard general staff in Helsinki was not interested in his intentions as they considered that the war would be determined in the populated areas of southern Finland, instead of the remote Lapland. In late spring, one thousand Finnish workers of the

Murmansk railway joined Ahava's troops.[5]

North Russia Intervention

As the Allies launched the North Russia Intervention in June 1918, Ahava's Red Guard was left between the British troops and the Russian

Ahava served the Murmansk Legion as a lieutenant-ranked

White Movement. Although Ahava switched sides, he still kept close relations with the Finnish Reds.[4]

In the winter of 1919, Ahava became affiliated with the Karelian nationalist movement which was a counterforce to the Finnish nationalists who wanted to annex East Karelia into Finland. In 17–18 February, Ahava participated the meeting of Karelian National Congress in Kem, with Oskari Tokoi as his political advisor. Ahava was elected as the secretary of the meeting. He read the statement proposing the declaration of an independent state of East Karelia. However, the Allies and Russian Whites opposed this idea strictly and suspected Ahava of mutiny in the Karelian Regiment. He was arrested in the beginning of March, but was soon released.[6]

Death

A month later, August Wesley revealed an upcoming rebellion in the Murmansk Legion. The plan was made by Ahava, the Finnish commander of the Murmansk Legion Verner Lehtimäki, and the Finnish revolutionary K. O. Iivonen. Ahava was arrested again on 6 April, but instead of court martial, he was forced to move to the Bolshevik side.[4]

On 16 April, the British lieutenant Robinson took Ahava by train to the village of

Petrograd-based Finnish newspaper Wapaus, his body was severely beaten and there was signs that Ahava had resisted his killers. The Allies never made any inspection, but the Serbian troops had been regarded as responsible for his death. Although, the Finnish author O. V. Itkonen later claimed hearing in Murmansk that Ahava was killed by Russian Whites.[4]

References

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  6. ^ a b c Nevakivi, Jukka (1970). Muurmannin legioona: Suomalaiset ja liittoutuneiden interventio Pohjois-Venäjälle 1918–1919. Helsinki: Tammi.