The Borneo Post

80 years since Leon Trotsky assassinat­ed by Stalin agent

- Natalia Cano with Moises Avila in Havana

MEXICO CITY: Bullet holes still pockmark the walls of the house in Mexico where Russian revolution­ary Leon Trotsky was brutally murdered 80 years ago, a reminder of an earlier failed assassinat­ion attempt.

“I’m already familiar” with death, Trotsky said after he survived that attack in his home in a suburb of Mexico City where he spent his last years in exile.

“I’ve been followed by the black hatred of Stalin across half the world,” he told a Mexican newspaper.

Months later, on Aug 20, 1940, that trail of persecutio­n finally caught up with him when he was killed with an ice axe by an assassin acting on Joseph Stalin’s orders.

“It was an ideologica­l, symbolic crime,” Cuban writer Leonardo Padura, who spent years researchin­g the murder for his novel ‘The Man who Loved Dogs’, told AFP.

Trotsky’s house in the leafy neighbourh­ood of Coyoacan has been preserved as a museum, where his grave is marked by a tombstone engraved with a hammer and sickle in the compound.

The watchtower­s, high walls and bullet holes left by Stalin’s hit squad offer an insight into how the key figure in the Bolshevik revolution spent his final days.

Split with Stalin

Born Lev Davidovich Bronstein, Trotsky was the founder of the Red Army and, along with Vladimir Lenin, one of the prime movers in the Bolshevik revolt that overthrew Tsar Nicholas II.

After falling out with Stalin in the 1920s, Trotsky was forced into exile.

The Marxist revolution­ary drifted from Turkey to Norway to France before finally landing in Mexico in 1937, where the muralist Diego Rivera helped to persuade General Lazaro Cardenas’s government to grant him asylum.

Paradoxica­lly, Trotsky and Cardenas never met, although they exchanged letters.

“Probably it was due to the circumstan­ces of the moment, because there was no need to meet,” the general’s son Cuauhtemoc Cardenas, himself a prominent politician, told AFP.

Accompanie­d by his wife Natalia Sedova, Trotsky was welcomed at the port of Tampico by the painter Frida Kahlo, with whom it is rumored that he had an affair.

“Upon his arrival, he mixed with a group of characters who coincided in those moments in an explosive Mexico, starting with Rivera and Kahlo,” said Padura.

Inner circle infiltrate­d

But even on another continent the revolution­ary was not safe from Stalin’s regime.

Trotsky and his wife survived the first attack on May 24, 1940 by throwing themselves under their bed.

Their grandson, who slept in the next room, suffered a foot injury. The incident led Trotsky to increase security at the compound, but it was not enough to stop his assassin, Ramon Mercader.

A Spanish communist and secret agent for the Soviet intelligen­ce services, Mercader managed to infiltrate Trotsky’s inner circle as the lover of a New

York Trotskyite.

After Trotsky installed a new metal gate at the entry to his compound controlled by guards, Mercader gave up on the idea of using a gun. Instead the experience­d mountainee­r chose an ice axe, to maximise his chances of escaping.

Armed with a backup pistol and knife under his coat, he entered the compound and plunged the axe into Trotsky’s skull.

Trotsky, gravely wounded, shouted for help and Mercader was captured.

The revolution­ary died at a Mexico City hospital the next day.

The murder weapon disappeare­d later that year but resurfaced decades later when the daughter of a policeman offered it for sale, saying she had kept it under her bed for years.

The axe was bought by Keith Melton, an espionage historian for the CIA, and is now on display at the Internatio­nal Spy Museum in Washington. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? This file photo taken in 1937 shows Trotsky and his wife Natalia Sedova in Mexico.
— AFP photo This file photo taken in 1937 shows Trotsky and his wife Natalia Sedova in Mexico.

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