to rule government
He exiled them to Siberia!
Yes Stalin sent many dissidents to exile in Siberia.
Siberia
There is very few ways to escape Siberia which made it a great site as a prison.
Stalin deported people who disagreed with him to various locations, depending on the specific circumstances. Some were sent to forced labor camps, known as Gulags, located in remote areas of the Soviet Union. Others were exiled to remote regions or countries, such as Siberia or Kazakhstan. Stalin's deportations targeted various groups, including political dissidents, ethnic minorities, and perceived threats to his regime.
Yes he did. Stalin said it was all his idea, and that Trotsky actually stole it from him, which was a lie. Stalin wanted all the merit and was paranoid about Trotsky coming back from Siberia (where he was exiled) to get all the power back. He thought getting the people to hate Trotsky was a good idea to keep the power for himself.
Actually, he was, 'On 18th April, 1902, Stalin was arrested after coordinating a strike at the large Rothschild plant at Batum. After spending 18 months in prison Stalin was deported to Siberia.' Hope this helped
Siberia's population is around 30 million people live in the area of Siberia.
Joseph Stalin sent people to Siberia when they didn't agree with him. He would have some people shipped to work camps in Siberia, exiled from the country or imprisoned and/or executed. Obviously, Stalin did not do those things to everyone who had a disagreement with him. He accepted some disagreements and had many more less extreme methods of dealing with such people. Stalin might have someone expelled from positions in the organs of the Communist Party or from the Party itself. He might dismiss someone from a job or position. Some people simply fell out of his favor and were relegated to unimportant tasks. If Stalin did not do those things to the person who disagreed with him, he might do them to a close family member of that person. Stalin had the wife of his Prime Minister and closest adviser during World War 2, Molotov, arrested and imprisoned. To some people, like Leon Trotsky, Stalin did "all of the above." He did this even to his own friends and family. As Stalin became more powerful, he became more ruthless. As he became more ruthless, he became more paranoid and fearful of revenge. He believed that differences of opinion meant lack of loyalty, which he saw as a sign of a potential threat from that person against him.
Siberia has 40 million people.
In the late 1930's border clashes between the USSR and Japan in the Far East intensified and caused Stalin to heavily reinforce his defenses there. The prospect of armed conflict there and in Eastern Europe, placed Stalin in a difficult situation.
Many of the people living in Siberia now are Russian. There were native Amur people including Mongols, Tartars, and Aleuts.