Los Angeles Times

Russians mark politician’s 2015 death

- By Mansur Mirovalev Mirovalev is a special correspond­ent.

MOSCOW — Thousands of Russians marched in Moscow on Sunday to mark the death of Boris Nemtsov, an outspoken opposition leader who was gunned down two years ago.

The protesters chanted “Putin is a thief !” and “Give Crimea back!” and carried portraits of Nemtsov, who was one of the best known critics of Russian President Vladimir Putin and his policies.

Nemtsov — a charismati­c former deputy prime minister who in the 1990s was widely seen as a successor to an ailing President Boris Yeltsin — enraged Putin’s Kremlin with his investigat­ions into government corruption and his criticism of the 2014 annexation of Crimea.

He was often lambasted on Kremlin-controlled television networks, which called him a “Western agent” and claimed he received U.S. funds to organize a coup in Russia.

Standing trial in his contract-style murder on Feb. 27, 2015, are five men with ties to Ramzan Kadyrov, the leader of Chechnya, who claims the men are innocent.

Nemtsov had accused Kadyrov of expropriat­ing Kremlin funds allocated to rebuild the southern Russian province devastated by two separatist wars.

On Sunday, a group of protesters chanted demands for Kadyrov to be placed on trial. Human rights groups and Chechen refugees have accused him of torture, kidnapping­s and extrajudic­ial killings.

Another group, led by opposition leader and former lawmaker Dmitri Gudkov, carried Russian flags with five holes symbolizin­g the five bullets that killed Nemtsov, who was 55.

Police said 5,000 people showed up at the rally. But independen­t monitors said that at least 15,000 marched and that thousands more attended rallies in St. Petersburg and Nemtsov’s hometown of Nizhny Novgorod.

In Moscow, an activist with a pro-Kremlin ultraconse­rvative group threw green dye in the face of one of Nemtsov’s political allies, former Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov.

“It only shows they are afraid of us, they can’t play fair,” Kasyanov told reporters after the incident.

Police rounded up several people, including a young man who donned a Putin mask. They tried to stop marchers from reaching the bridge where Nemtsov was killed just outside the Kremlin walls, but thousands got through and placed flowers next to his portraits displayed there.

Moscow authoritie­s have refused to heed calls to name the bridge after Nemtsov and routinely send janitors there late at night to remove flowers, candles and portraits of Nemtsov.

“We are not afraid, no matter how much they are trying to intimidate us, frighten us,” Alla Polonenko, a 32-year-old graphic designer, said after placing red carnations next to a blackand-white photograph.

Since his election in 2000, Putin has presided over a crackdown on opposition groups through legislativ­e measures, smear campaigns in pro-Kremlin media and arrests and trials that are widely seen as government

The Moscow rally was peaceful compared with some other opposition marches. Hundreds of demonstrat­ors were arrested and more than a dozen were sentenced to jail after massive rallies in 2011 and 2012.

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