Leningrad siege - 70 years on

People lay flowers at a memorial for victims of the 1941-1944 Nazi siege of Leningrad at the Serafimovskoye cemetery on January 27, 2011.

People lay flowers at a memorial for victims of the 1941-1944 Nazi siege of Leningrad at the Serafimovskoye cemetery on January 27, 2011.

Published Sep 8, 2011

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St Petersburg, Russia - Russia's second-largest city is commemorating the 70th anniversary of the start of a deadly 29-month-long Nazi siege during the World War II that cut its population by nearly a million people.

Public loudspeakers in St Petersburg, along with radio and television stations, on Thursday morning broadcast roaring air-raid warnings and sounds of a metronome. The metronome sound was used during the siege to inform residents of air raids and all-clear announcements.

The 872-day-long siege of the city, then known as Leningrad, is one of the darkest moments of Russia's participation in the war. A million city residents are believed to have died of hunger and bombings and while defending the city's outskirts. - Sapa-AP

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