Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Same old Russia

- SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS

L ast week’s assassinat­ion of Boris Nemtsov in the shadows of the Kremlin is the most significan­t political killing to occur in the 15 years Russian President and thug-in-chief Vladimir Putin has been in power.

Not because Nemtsov had any realistic hope of challengin­g Putin for power. He didn’t. But rather because of what Nemtsov represente­d. He was the rarest of all creatures in Russia’s political constellat­ion—a true reformer whose ethical compass pointed due north.

Political assassinat­ions have often been employed in Russia as an effective tool for keeping order. Nothing like a high-profile killing to make folks think twice about opposing the government. Finger-pointing and professed outrage are the traditiona­l aftermath, and we’re seeing that now. But soon, usually very soon, world events begin to eclipse the killing—even when it’s done through bizarre means such as radiation poisoning—and things settle back into what passes for normal in Russia.

We can only hope this will be different. But it is more likely to presage a new wave of violence.

A protege of former President Boris Yeltsin, Nemtsov was an outspoken critic of Putin’s policies in Ukraine and had said he was going to release evidence that Putin’s government had a very heavy hand in fueling the supposedly independen­t efforts of the fighters in eastern Ukraine. His death has prompted tens of thousands of Russians to publicly mourn him, many attending his funeral—another likely reason for more rather than less violent suppressio­n.

Nemtsov’s murder occurred in the most heavily guarded, watched and photograph­ed section of Moscow, yet no one has any pictures of the drive-by shooting. The bridge on which he was killed was within sight of the Kremlin. It has to be monitored intensely. But, somehow, nothing got recorded.

Putin will find someone to blame. He always does. He warned several years ago that his opposition might kill one of its own leaders to create a martyr, and that ludicrous theory was revived last week. At the time, Nemtsov saw it as a threat by Putin.

Some intellectu­als suggest Putin could use this killing the way Stalin used the 1934 murder of the charismati­c Bolshevik Sergei Kirov to unleash a time of terror and purges. Conditions in Russia and the world are somewhat different now, but we wouldn’t put it past Putin to try.

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