Waikato Times

Brazen assassinat­ion shocks opposition community

Politician spoke out against Russian president and paid the price.

- Under threat: Brutal murder: Photo: Reuters

Thousands of stunned Russians laid flowers and lit candles yesterday on the bridge where opposition politician Boris Nemtsov was shot dead near the Kremlin, a murder that showed the risks of speaking out against President Vladimir Putin.

Nemtsov, 55, was shot four times in the back by assailants in a white car as he walked across the bridge over the Moskva River in central Moscow with a Ukrainian woman, who was unhurt, just before midnight on Saturday, police said.

Police sealed off the blood-stained bridge close to the red walls of the Kremlin and Red Square for two hours overnight, then hosed it down as people came to pay tribute to one of Putin’s biggest opponents over Russia’s role in Ukraine.

Flowers were piled at least a metre high, about 2 metres deep and 2m wide.

A piece of white paper saying ‘‘We are all Nemtsov’’ stood among the flowers.

‘‘People are afraid to support our movement. Opposition activists receive threats every day and Boris was no exception. But they won’t stop us,’’ said opposition activist Mark Galperin.

A former deputy prime minister who had feared he would be murdered, Nemtsov was the most prominent opposition figure killed in Putin’s 15-year rule.

His gangland-style killing was reminiscen­t of the chaotic 1990s after the Communist Soviet Union collapsed and raised further questions about the opposition’s ability to mount any challenge to Putin in such a dangerous environmen­t.

The Kremlin deflected accusation­s that it was to blame and Putin called for the killers to be found quickly, taking the investigat­ion under presidenti­al control and denouncing what he said was a ‘‘provocatio­n’’ before an opposition protest today.

But the killing focused attention on the tough treatment of opponents in Putin’s third term, during which several leading critics have been jailed or have fled the country following mass rallies against the president, a former KGB spy, three years ago.

‘‘That a leader of the opposition could be shot beside the walls of the Kremlin is beyond imaginatio­n.

‘‘There can be only one version: that he was shot for telling the truth,’’ Mikhail Kasyanov, an opposition leader and a former prime minister under Putin, said at the scene.

There was no claim of responsibi­lity, though police were following several lines of inquiry and looking at surveillan­ce camera footage in one of Moscow’s busiest and most guarded areas. Former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev cautioned against jumping to conclusion­s.

‘‘Certain forces will try to use the killing to their own advantage.

‘‘They are thinking how to get rid of Putin,’’ he said.

Leading internatio­nal condemnati­on of the murder, United States President Barack Obama called for a prompt, impartial and transparen­t investigat­ion to ensure those responsibl­e were brought to justice for the ‘‘vicious killing’’.

Some opposition figures blamed the Kremlin directly.

Others depicted Russian society as in moral decline, describing an environmen­t where Putin demanded total loyalty and supporters went to great lengths to do what they thought might please him.

‘‘In Putin’s atmosphere of hatred and violence, abroad and in Russia, bloodshed is the prerequisi­te to show

Boris Nemtsov was worried that he might be assassinat­ed, he said in an interview recently. loyalty, that you are on the team,’’ another opposition leader, former world chess champion Garry Kasparov, said on Twitter. ‘‘If Putin gave [the] order to murder Boris Nemtsov is not the point.

‘‘It is Putin’s dictatorsh­ip. His 24/7 propaganda about enemies of the state.’’

Nemtsov, who was out walking on Great Moskvorets­ky Bridge after a meal in a restaurant by Red Square, said in a recent interview he was concerned the president might want him dead over his opposition to the conflict in Ukraine.

‘‘Boris periodical­ly received anonymous threats on social networking sites . . . Boris was worried,’’ said opposition politician Ilya Yashin.

Today’s opposition march is intended to protest against the war in east Ukraine, where pro-Russian rebels have seized a swath of territory.

Ukraine, the West and some Russians accuse Russia of sending troops to support the rebels, an accusation Russia has repeatedly denied.

Tall, with a mop of black curly hair that had started to turn grey, Nemtsov often dressed casually in big sweaters and was known for booming speeches criticisin­g Putin at rallies.

Organisers of today’s march were divided after Nemtsov’s death over whether to hold the rally or turn it into a demonstrat­ion of mourning in central Moscow. Some feared it could end in violence if police acted with a heavy hand.

Police said they were following several lines of inquiry, including a possible attack to destabilis­e the political situation in Russia or an attack by radical Islamists on a well-known Jew, but political murders often go unsolved in Russia.

Nemtsov’s criticism of Putin won him support among Moscow’s intellectu­als and the nascent middle class but he had little support outside the big cities.

Another opposition figure, Ksenia Sobchak, said Nemtsov had been preparing a report on the presence of Russian troops in Ukraine.

Nemtsov was a fighter against corruption. In other reports, he condemned overspendi­ng on the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics by the Russian authoritie­s and listed the many state buildings, helicopter­s and planes that Putin has at his disposal.

He was also one of the leaders of the rallies in the winter of 2011-12 that became the biggest protests against Putin since he first rose to power in 2000.

Nemtsov briefly served as a deputy prime minister under president Boris Yeltsin in the late 1990s, when he gained a reputation as a leading liberal economic reformer.

The opposition has failed to dent Putin’s popularity even though many people feel the pain of Western economic

Former deputy prime minister Boris Nemtsov has been assassinat­ed near the Kremlin, possibly for threatenin­g to reveal persuasive evidence of Russian involvemen­t in the war in Ukraine. Vladimir Putin has promised to investigat­e thoroughly but friends say such a probe will only be a whitewash. sanctions over Ukraine, low oil prices and poor economic management.

Opposition blogger Alexei Navalny is serving a 15-day jail term, preventing him attending today’s march.

Kasparov is based in the United States and former oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, freed in late 2013 after a decade in jail, lives in Switzerlan­d.

Some opponents say they fear for their lives. Anna Politkovsk­aya, an investigat­ive journalist, was shot dead

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand