
.
.Boris
YELTSIN
Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin
(1 February 1931 – 23 April 2007) was the first President of the
Russian Federation, serving from 1991 to 1999. Boris Yeltsin came to power with a
wave of high expectations. On 12 June 1991 he was elected
president of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic with
57% of the vote, becoming the first popularly elected president.
However, Yeltsin never recovered his popularity after a series of
economic and political crises in Russia in the 1990s. Following the dissolution of the
Soviet Union in December 1991, Yeltsin, vowing to transform
Russia's socialist command economy into a free market economy,
endorsed price liberalization and privatization programs. Due to
the method of privatization, a good deal of the national wealth
fell into the hands of a small group of people.
In August 1991, Yeltsin won
international plaudits for casting himself as a democrat and
defying the August coup attempt of 1991 by the members of Soviet
government opposed to perestroika. The Yeltsin era was marked by
widespread corruption, economic collapse, and enormous political
and social problems. He either acted as his own prime minister
(until June 1992) or appointed men of his choice, regardless of
parliament. His confrontations with parliament climaxed in the
October 1993 Russian constitutional crisis, when Yeltsin called in
soldiers to retake the Russian White House, after his opponents
had taken over the building.
Later in 1993, Yeltsin imposed a new
constitution with strong presidential powers, which was approved
by referendum in December. He left office widely unpopular with
the Russian population as an ineffectual and ailing autocrat. By
some estimates, his approval ratings when leaving office were two
percent.
Just hours before the first day of
2000, Yeltsin made a surprise announcement of his resignation,
leaving the presidency in the hands of
Vladimir Putin.
Early life
Boris Yeltsin was born in the
village of Butka, in Talitsky District of Sverdlovsk Oblast,
Russian SFSR. His father, Nikolay Yeltsin, was convicted of
anti-Soviet agitation in 1934 and sentenced to hard labour in a
gulag for three years. Following his release he remained
unemployed for a period of time and then worked in construction.
His mother, Klavdiya Vasilyevna Yeltsina, worked as a seamstress.
Boris Yeltsin studied at Pushkin
High School in Berezniki in Perm Krai. He was fond of sports (in
particular skiing, gymnastics, volleyball, track and field, boxing
and wrestling) despite losing the thumb and index finger of his
left hand when he and some friends sneaked into a Red Army supply
depot, stole several grenades, and tried to dissect them.
Yeltsin received his higher
education at the Ural State Technical University in Sverdlovsk,
majoring in construction, and graduated in 1955. The subject of
his degree paper was "Television Tower".
From 1955 to 1957 he worked as a
foreman with the building trust Uraltyazhtrubstroy and from 1957
to 1963 he worked in Sverdlovsk, and was promoted from
construction site superintendent to chief of the Construction
Directorate with the Yuzhgorstroy Trust. In 1963 he became chief
engineer, and in 1965 head of the Sverdlovsk House-Building
Combine, responsible for sewerage and technical plumbing. He
joined the ranks of the CPSU nomenklatura in 1968 when he
was appointed head of construction with the Sverdlovsk Regional
Party Committee. In 1975 he became secretary of the regional
committee in charge of the region's industrial development. In
1976 the Politburo of the CPSU promoted him to the post of the
first secretary of the CPSU Committee of Sverdlovsk Oblast
(effectively he became the head of one of the most important
industrial regions in the USSR), he remained in this position
until 1985.
President of the RSFSR
In March 1989, Yeltsin was elected
to the Congress of People's Deputies as the delegate from Moscow
district and gained a seat on the Supreme Soviet of Russia.
On 29 May 1990, he was elected
chairman of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian
SFSR (RSFSR), the post he held until 10 July 1991. He was
supported by both democratic and conservative members of the
Supreme Soviet, which sought power in the developing political
situation in the country. A part of this power struggle was the
opposition between power structures of the Soviet Union and the
RSFSR. In an attempt to gain more power, on 12 June 1990, the
Congress of People's Deputies of the RSFSR adopted a declaration
of sovereignty and Yeltsin quit the CPSU in July 1990.
On 12 June 1991, Yeltsin won 57% of the popular vote in the
democratic presidential elections for the Russian republic,
defeating Gorbachev's preferred candidate,
Nikolai Ryzhkov who got just 16% of the vote. In his election
campaign, Yeltsin criticized the "dictatorship of the center", but
did not suggest the introduction of a market economy. Instead, he
said that he would put his head on the railtrack in the event of
increased prices. Yeltsin took office on 10 July.
On 18 August 1991, a coup against
Gorbachev was launched by the government members opposed to
perestroika. Gorbachev was held in Crimea while Yeltsin raced to
the White House of Russia (residence of the Supreme Soviet of the
RSFSR) in Moscow to defy the coup. The White House was surrounded
by the military but the troops defected in the face of mass
popular demonstrations. Yeltsin responded to the coup by making a
memorable speech from the turret of a tank. By 21 August most of
the coup leaders had fled Moscow and Gorbachev was "rescued" from
Crimea and then returned to Moscow. Yeltsin was subsequently
hailed by his supporters around the world for rallying mass
opposition to the coup.
Although restored to his position, Gorbachev's powers were now
fatally compromised. Neither union nor Russian power structures
heeded his commands as support had swung over to Yeltsin. Through
the fall of 1991, the Russian government took over the union
government, ministry by ministry.
On 6 November 1991, Yeltsin issued a decree banning the
Communist Party throughout the RSFSR.
In early December 1991, Ukraine
voted for independence from the Soviet Union. A week later, on 8
December, Yeltsin met Ukrainian president Leonid Kravchuk and the
leader of Belarus, Stanislav Shushkevich, in Belovezhskaya
Pushcha, where the three presidents announced the dissolution of
the Soviet Union and that they would establish a voluntary
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) in its place. According
to Mikhail Gorbachev, the president of the Soviet Union at that
time, Yeltsin kept the plans of the Belovezhskaya meeting in
strict secrecy and the main goal of the dissolution of the Soviet
Union was to get rid of Gorbachev, who by that time had started to
recover his position after the events of August. Mikhail Gorbachev
has also accused Yeltsin of violating the people's will expressed
in the referendum in which the majority voted to keep the Soviet
Union.
On 24 December, the Russian
Federation took the Soviet Union's seat in the United Nations. The
next day, President Gorbachev resigned and the Soviet Union ceased
to exist, thereby ending the world's
largest and most influential socialist state. Economic relations
between the former Soviet republics were severely compromised.
Millions of ethnic Russians found themselves in the newly formed
foreign countries.
President of the Russian Federation
Yeltsin's
first term
Radical reforms
Just days after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, Boris
Yeltsin resolved to embark on a program of radical economic
reform, with the aim of restructuring Russia's economic
system—converting the world's largest command economy into a
free-market one. During early discussions of this transition,
Yeltsin's advisers debated issues of speed and sequencing, with an
apparent division between those favoring a rapid approach and
those favoring a gradual or slower approach.
In late 1991 Yeltsin turned to the advice of Western
economists, and Western institutions such as the IMF, the World
Bank, and the U.S. Treasury Department, who had developed a
standard policy recipe for transition economies in the late 1980s.
This policy recipe came to be known as the "Washington Consensus"
or "shock therapy", a combination of measures intended to
liberalize prices and stabilize the state's budget. Such measures
had been attempted in Poland, and advocates of "shock therapy"
felt the same could be done in Russia. Some Russian policymakers
were skeptical that this was the way to go, but the approach was
favored by Yeltsin's deputy, Yegor Gaidar, a 35-year-old Russian economist inclined toward
radical reform.
On 2 January 1992, Yeltsin, acting as his own
prime minister, ordered the liberalization of foreign trade,
prices, and currency. At the same time, Yeltsin followed a policy
of 'macroeconomic stabilization,' a harsh austerity regime
designed to control inflation. Under Yeltsin's stabilization
program, interest rates were raised to extremely high levels to
tighten money and restrict credit. To bring state spending and
revenues into balance, Yeltsin raised new taxes heavily, cut back
sharply on government subsidies to industry and construction, and
made steep cuts to state welfare spending.
In early 1992, prices skyrocketed throughout Russia, and deep
credit crunch shut down many industries and brought about a
protracted depression. The reforms devastated the living standards
of much of the population, especially the groups dependent on
Soviet-era state subsidies and welfare entitlement programs.
Through the 1990s, Russia's GDP fell by 50 percent, vast sectors
of the economy were wiped out, inequality and unemployment grew
dramatically, while incomes fell. Hyperinflation, caused by the
Central Bank of Russia's loose monetary policy, wiped out a lot of
personal savings, and tens of millions of Russians were plunged
into poverty.
Some economists argue that in the 1990s Russia suffered an
economic downturn more severe than the United States or Germany
had undergone six decades earlier in the
Great Depression.
Russian commentators and even some Western economists, such as
Marshall Goldman, widely blamed Yeltsin's Western-backed
economic program for the country's disastrous economic performance
in the 1990s. Many politicians began to quickly distance
themselves from the program. In February 1992, Russia's vice
president,
Alexander Rutskoy denounced the Yeltsin program as "economic
genocide."
By 1993 conflict over the reform direction escalated between
Yeltsin on the one side, and the opposition to radical economic
reform in Russia's parliament on the other.
Confrontation with parliament
Also throughout 1992, Yeltsin wrestled with the
Supreme Soviet of Russia and the Congress of People's Deputies for
control over government, government policy, government banking and
property. In the course of 1992, the speaker of the Russian
Supreme Soviet, Ruslan Khasbulatov, came out in opposition to the
reforms, despite claiming to support Yeltsin's overall goals. In
December 1992, the 7th Congress of People's Deputies succeeded in
turning down the Yeltsin-backed candidacy of Yegor Gaidar for the
position of Russian prime minister. Eventually, on 14 December,
Viktor Chernomyrdin, seen as a compromise figure, was
confirmed in the office.
The conflict escalated on 20 March 1993 when Yeltsin, in a
televised address to the nation, announced that he was going to
assume certain "special powers" in order to implement his program
of reforms. In response, the hastily-called 9th Congress of
People's Deputies attempted to remove Yeltsin from presidency
through impeachment on 26 March 1993. Yeltsin's opponents gathered
more than 600 votes for impeachment, but fell 72 votes short of
the required two-thirds majority.
On 21 September 1993 Yeltsin announced in a televised address his
decision to disband the Supreme Soviet and Congress of People's
Deputies by decree.
In his address Yeltsin declared his intent to rule by decree
until the election of the new parliament and a referendum on a new
constitution, triggering the
constitutional crisis of October 1993. On the night after
Yeltsin's televised address, the Supreme Soviet declared Yeltsin
removed from presidency, by virtue of his breaching the
constitution, and Vice-President Alexander Rutskoy was sworn in as
the acting president.
Between 21–24 September Yeltsin was confronted by significant
popular unrest, encouraging the defenders of the parliament.
Moscow saw what amounted to a spontaneous mass uprising of
anti-Yeltsin demonstrators numbering in the tens of thousands
marching in the streets resolutely seeking to aid forces defending
the parliament building. The demonstrators were protesting the new
and terrible living conditions under Yeltsin. Since 1989 GDP had
declined by half. Corruption was rampant, violent crime was
skyrocketing, medical services were collapsing, food and fuel were
increasingly scarce and life expectancy was falling for all but a
tiny handful of the population; moreover, Yeltsin was increasingly
getting the blame.
By early October, Yeltsin had secured the support of Russia's
army and ministry of interior forces. In a massive show of force,
Yeltsin called up tanks to shell the
Russian White House, Russia's parliament building. The attack
on Russia's parliament building cost about 500 peoples lives and
injured 1000 more.
As Supreme Soviet was dissolved, in December 1993 elections to
the newly established parliament, the State Duma, were held.
Candidates associated with Yeltsin's economic policies were
overwhelmed by a huge anti-Yeltsin vote, the bulk of which was
divided between the Communist Party and ultra-nationalists. The
referendum, however, held at the same time, approved the new
constitution, which significantly expanded the powers of the
president, giving Yeltsin a right to appoint the members of the
government, to dismiss the prime minister and, in some cases, to dissolve the Duma.
Chechnya
In December 1994, Yeltsin ordered the military invasion of
Chechnya in an attempt to restore Moscow's control over the
republic. Nearly two years later Yeltsin withdrew federal forces
from the devastated Chechnya under a 1996 peace agreement brokered
by
Alexander Lebed, then Yeltsin's security chief. The peace deal
allowed Chechnya greater autonomy but not full independence.
The decision to launch the war in Chechnya dismayed many in the
West.
TIME magazine wrote:
"Then, what was to be made of Boris Yeltsin? Clearly he could
no longer be regarded as the democratic hero of Western myth.
But had he become an old- style communist boss, turning his back
on the democratic reformers he once championed and throwing in
his lot with militarists and ultranationalists? Or was he a
befuddled, out-of-touch chief being manipulated, knowingly or
unwittingly, by– well, by whom exactly? If there was to be a
dictatorial coup, would Yeltsin be its victim or its leader?"
Chechnya was the ultimate downfall for Boris Yeltsin: he chose
military intervention which led to 15,000 deaths, most being
civilians.
Privatization and the rise of "the oligarchs"
Following the collapse of the Soviet Union, Yeltsin promoted
privatization as a way of spreading ownership of shares in
former state enterprises as widely as possible to create political
support for his economic reforms. In the West, privatization was
viewed as the key to the transition from communism in Eastern
Europe, ensuring a quick dismantling of the Soviet-era command
economy to make way for 'free market reforms.' In the early 1990s,
Anatoly Chubais, Yeltsin's deputy for economic policy, emerged
as a leading advocate of privatization in Russia.
In late 1992, Yeltsin launched a program of free vouchers as a
way to give mass privatization a jump-start. Under the program,
all Russian citizens were issued vouchers, each with a nominal
value of around 10,000 rubles, for purchase of shares of select
state enterprises. Although each citizen initially received a
voucher of equal face value, within months most of them converged
in the hands of intermediaries who were ready to buy them for cash
right away.
In 1995, as Yeltsin struggled to finance Russia's growing
foreign debt and gain support from the Russian business elite for
his bid in the early-1996 presidential elections, the Russian
president prepared for a new wave of privatization offering stock
shares in some of Russia's most valuable state enterprises in
exchange for bank loans. The program was promoted as a way of
simultaneously speeding up privatization and ensuring the
government a much-needed infusion of cash for its operating needs.
However, the deals were
effectively giveaways of valuable state assets to a small group of
tycoons in finance, industry, energy, telecommunications, and the
media who came to be known as "oligarchs" in the mid-1990s. This
was due to the fact that ordinary people sold their vouchers for
cash. The vouchers where bought out by a small group of investers.
By mid-1996, substantial ownership shares over major firms were
acquired at very low prices by a handful of people. Boris
Berezovsky, who controlled major stakes in several banks and the
national media, emerged as one of Yeltsin's most prominent
backers. Along with Berezovsky, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, Vladimir
Potanin, Vladimir Bogdanov, Rem Viakhirev, Vagit Alekperov,
Alexander Smolensky, Victor Vekselberg, Mikhail Fridman and a few
years later Roman Abramovich, were habitually mentioned in the
media as Russia's oligarchs.
1996
presidential election
In February 1996, Yeltsin announced that he would seek a second
term in the
spring 1996 Russian presidential election. The announcement
followed weeks of speculation that Yeltsin was at the end of his
political career because of his health problems and growing
unpopularity in Russia. At the time Yeltsin was recuperating from
a series of heart attacks. Domestic and international observers
also noted his occasionally erratic behaviour. When campaigning
opened at the beginning of 1996, Yeltsin's popularity was close to
zero.
Meanwhile, the opposition
Communist Party of the Russian Federation had already gained
ground in parliamentary voting on 17 December 1995, and its
candidate,
Gennady Zyuganov, had a strong grass roots organization,
especially in the rural areas and small towns, and appealed
effectively to memories of the old days of Soviet prestige on the
international stage and the socialist domestic order.
Panic struck the Yeltsin team when opinion polls suggested that
the ailing president could not win; some members of his entourage
urged him to cancel presidential elections and effectively rule as
dictator from then on. Instead, Yeltsin changed his campaign team,
assigning a key role to his daughter,
Tatyana Dyachenko, and appointing Chubais as campaign manager.
Chubais, acting as both Yeltsin's campaign manager and adviser on
Russia's privatisation programme, used his control of the
privatisation programme as an instrument of Yeltsin's reelection
campaign.
In the spring of 1996, Chubais and Yeltsin recruited a team of
a handful of financial and media oligarchs to bankroll the Yeltsin
campaign and guaranteed favorable media coverage the president on
national television and in leading newspapers.
In return, Chubais allowed well-connected Russian business leaders
to acquire majority stakes in some of Russia's most valuable
state-owned assets.
The media painted a picture of a fateful choice for Russia,
between Yeltsin and a "return to totalitarianism." The oligarchs
even played up the threat of civil war if a Communist were elected
president.
Yeltsin campaigned energetically, dispelling concerns about his
health, and maintained a high media profile. To boost his
popularity, Yeltsin promised to abandon some his more unpopular
economic reforms, boost welfare spending, end the war in Chechnya,
and pay wage and pension arrears. Yeltsin's campaign also got a
boost from the announcement of a $10 billion loan to the Russian
government from the International Monetary Fund.
Zyuganov, who lacked Yeltsin's resources and financial backing,
saw his strong initial lead whittle away. After the first round on
16 June Yeltsin appointed a highly popular candidate Alexander
Lebed, who came in third in the first round, Secretary of the
Security Council of Russia, sacked at the latter's behest defence
minister Pavel Grachev and on 20 June sacked a number of his
siloviki, one of them being his chief of presidential security
Alexander Korzhakov, viewed by many as Yeltsin's éminence grise.
In the run-off on 3 July, with a turnout of 68.9%, Yeltsin won
53.8% of the vote and Zyuganov 40.3%, with the rest (5.9%) voting
"against
all".
In his second term, Yeltsin was unable to follow through on
most of his campaign promises, except for ending the Chechen war, which
was halted for most of the period.
Yeltsin's
second term
In July 1996, Yeltsin was re-elected as president with
financial support from influential
business oligarchs who owed their wealth to their connections
with Yeltsin's administration. Despite only gaining 35% of the
first round vote in the 1996 elections, Yeltsin defeated his
communist rival Gennady Zyuganov with 54% in the runoff election.
Later that year, Yeltsin underwent an emergency quintuple heart
bypass surgery and remained in the hospital
for months.
During Yeltsin's presidency, Russia received
US$ 40 billion in funds from the
IMF and other international lending organizations. However,
his opponents allege that most of these funds were stolen by
people from Yeltsin's circle and placed in foreign banks.
In 1998, a political and economic crisis emerged when Yeltsin's
government defaulted on its debts, causing financial markets to
panic and the
ruble to collapse in the
1998 financial crisis.
During the 1999 Kosovo war,
Yeltsin strongly opposed the NATO military campaign against
Yugoslavia, and warned of possible Russian intervention if
NATO deployed ground troops to Kosovo. In televised comments he
stated: "I told NATO, the Americans, the Germans: Don't push us
toward military action. Otherwise there will be a European war for
sure and possibly world war."
On 15 May 1999, Yeltsin survived another attempt of
impeachment, this time by the democratic and communist opposition
in the State Duma. He was charged with several unconstitutional
activities, including the signing of the Belavezha Accords,
dissolving the Soviet Union in December 1991, the coup-d'état in
October 1993, and initiating the war in Chechnya in 1994. None of
these charges received the two-thirds majority of the Duma which
was required to initiate the process of impeachment of the president.
On 9 August 1999 Yeltsin fired his prime minister,
Sergei Stepashin, and for the fourth time, fired his entire
cabinet. In Stepashin's place he appointed
Vladimir Putin, relatively unknown at that time, and announced
his wish to see Putin as his successor.
In late 1999 Yeltsin and President Clinton openly disagreed on
the war in Chechnya. At the November meeting of the Organization
for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Clinton pointed his finger
at Yeltsin and demanded he halt bombing attacks that had resulted
in many civilian casualties. Yeltsin immediately left the
conference.
In December while visiting China to seek support on Chechnya,
Yeltsin replied to Clinton’s criticism of a Russian ultimatum to
citizens of Grozny. He bluntly pronounced: "Yesterday, Clinton
permitted himself to put pressure on Russia. It seems he has for a
minute, for a second, for half a minute, forgotten that Russia has
a full arsenal of nuclear weapons. He has forgotten about that."
Clinton dismissed Yeltsin's comments stating: "I didn't think he'd
forgotten that America was a great power when he disagreed with
what I did in Kosovo." It fell to Vladimir Putin to downplay
Yeltsin's comments and present reassurances about U.S. and Russian
relations.
Resignation
On 31 December 1999, in a surprise announcement aired at 12:00
noon on Russian television and taped in the morning of the same
day, Yeltsin said he had resigned and Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin had taken over as acting president, with
elections due to take place on 26 March 2000. Yeltsin asked for
forgiveness for what he acknowledged were errors of his rule, and
said Russia needed to enter the new century with new political
leaders. Yeltsin said: "I want to beg forgiveness for your dreams
that never came true. And also I would like to beg forgiveness not
to have justified your hopes."
Alleged alcoholism and neurological disorder
According to numerous reports, Yeltsin struggled with
alcoholism. The subject made headlines abroad during Yeltsin's
visit to the U.S. in 1989 for a series of lectures on social and
political life in the Soviet Union. That trip was described by a
report in the Italian newspaper
La Repubblica. The article reported that Yeltsin often
appeared drunk in public. The article was reprinted by
Pravda. Yeltsin's alleged alcoholism was also the subject
of media discussion following his meeting with U.S. Deputy
Secretary of State Strobe Talbott following Clinton's inauguration
in 1993 and after his flight stop-over at Shannon Airport, Ireland
in September 1994 when the waiting Irish Taoiseach (prime
minister) Albert Reynolds was told that Yeltsin was unwell and
would not be leaving the aircraft. Reynolds tried to make excuses
for him in an effort to offset his own humiliation in vainly
waiting outside the plane to meet him. Speaking to the media in
March 2010, Yeltsin's daughter Tatyana Yumasheva, claimed that her father suffered a heart
attack on the flight from the United States to Moscow and was
therefore not in the position to leave the plane.
According to former Deputy Prime Minister of Russia
Boris Nemtsov, the bizarre behavior of Yeltsin resulted from
"strong drugs" given to him by Kremlin's doctors, which were
incompatible even with a small amount of alcohol. This was
discussed by journalist Yelena Tregubova from the "Kremlin's pool"
in connection with an episode during Yeltsin's visit to Stockholm
in 1997 when Yeltsin suddenly started talking nonsense (he
allegedly told his bemused audience that Swedish meatballs
reminded him of Björn Borg's face), lost his balance, and almost
fell down on the podium after drinking a single glass of
Champagne. Yeltsin, in his memoirs, claimed no recollection of the
event but did however make a passing reference to the incident
when he met Borg a year later at The World Circle Kabaddi Cup in
Hamilton, Ontario, where the pair had been invited to present the
trophy. Similarly, Yeltsin made a hasty withdrawal from the
funeral of King Hussein of Jordan in February 1999.
After Yeltsin's death, a Dutch neurosurgeon revealed that his
team was secretly flown to Moscow to operate on Yeltsin in 1999.
Yeltsin suffered from an unspecified neurological disorder that
affected his sense of balance, causing him to wobble as if in a
drunken state; the goal of the operation was to reduce the pain.
According to author and historian Taylor Branch's interviews
with
Bill Clinton, on a 1995 visit to Washington D.C., Yeltsin was
found on Pennsylvania Avenue, drunk, in his underwear and trying
to hail a cab in order to find pizza.
Life after
resignation
Yeltsin's personal and health problems received a great deal of
attention in the global press. As the years went on, he was often
viewed as an increasingly unstable leader, rather than the
inspiring figure he was once seen as. The possibility that he
might die in office was often discussed. Starting in the last
years of his presidential term, Yeltsin's primary residence was
the Gorki-9 presidential dacha west of Moscow. He made
frequent stays at the nearby government sanatorium in
Barvikha.
Yeltsin maintained a low profile after his resignation, making
almost no public statements or appearances. However, on 13
September 2004, following the
Beslan school hostage crisis and nearly-concurrent terrorist
attacks in Moscow, Putin launched an initiative to replace the
election of regional governors with a system whereby they would be
directly appointed by the president and approved by regional
legislatures. Yeltsin, together with
Mikhail Gorbachev, publicly criticized Putin's plan as a step
away from democracy in Russia and a return to the centrally-run
political apparatus of the Soviet era.
In September 2005, Yeltsin underwent a hip operation in Moscow
after breaking his femur
in a fall while vacationing on the Italian
island of
Sardinia.
On 1 February 2006, Yeltsin celebrated his 75th birthday. He
used this occasion as an opportunity to criticize a "monopolistic"
U.S. foreign policy, and to state that
Vladimir Putin was the right choice for Russia.
He also disputed accusations of corruption.
Death
Boris Yeltsin died of
congestive heart failure
on 23 April 2007 at the age of 76.
According to experts quoted by
Komsomolskaya Pravda, the onset of Yeltsin's condition was
due to his visit to Jordan between 25 March and 2 April. He was
buried in the Novodevichy Cemetery on 25 April 2007, following a
period during which his body had lain in state in the Cathedral of
Christ the Saviour in Moscow. Yeltsin was the first Russian
statesman in 113 years to be buried in a church ceremony, after
Emperor Alexander III. He was also the first leader in Russian and
Soviet history to die quietly in retirement having overseen a
peaceful transfer to his successor, Lenin not having appointed a
successor upon his death and Khrushchev being ousted in a coup.
President Putin declared the day of his funeral a national
day of mourning, with flags flown at half-staff and all
entertainment programs suspended for the day.
Yeltsin is survived by his wife,
Naina Iosifovna Yeltsina, whom he married in 1956, and their
two daughters Yelena and
Tatyana, born in 1957 and 1959 respectively.
Russian president
Vladimir Putin said, declaring 25 April 2007, a day of
national mourning, that:
Yeltsin's "presidency has inscribed him forever in Russian
and in world history." ... "A new democratic Russia was born
during his time: a free, open and peaceful country. A state in
which the power truly does belong to the people." ... "the first
President of Russia’s strength consisted in the mass support of
Russian citizens for his ideas and aspirations. Thanks to the
will and direct initiative of President Boris Yeltsin a new
constitution, one which declared human rights a supreme value,
was adopted. It gave people the opportunity to freely express
their thoughts, to freely choose power in Russia, to realise
their creative and entrepreneurial plans. This Constitution
permitted us to begin building a truly effective Federation."
... "We knew (Yeltsin) as a brave and a warm-hearted, spiritual
person. He was an upstanding and courageous national leader. And
he was always very honest and frank while defending his
position." ... "(Yeltsin) assumed full responsibility for
everything he called for, for everything he aspired to. For
everything he tried to do and did do for the sake of Russia, for
the sake of millions of Russians. And he invariably took upon
himself, let it in his heart, all the trials and tribulations of
Russia, peoples’ difficulties and problems."
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