April 23, 2007
Russia: Boris Yeltsin Dead At 76
by Jeremy Bransten
Yeltsin (right) leaving the Kremlin after resigning on December 31, 1999 (ITAR-TASS)
April 23, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- Boris Yeltsin, the first president of an independent Russia, has died at the age of 76, reportedly of heart failure.
Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin, son of Siberian peasants, began his career building machines and ended up reshaping a nation.
Yeltsin was not born to money or influence. He was born to hunger, on February 1, 1931, in the village of Butka, in Russia's Sverdlovsk Oblast.
But Yeltsin's ambition helped him survive that harsh decade as well as World War II. His charisma and working-class background won him a place at the Urals Polytechnic Institute's engineering faculty. After graduation, Yeltsin quickly rose from construction foreman at a local machine-building plant to chief engineer of the Yuzhgorstroi construction company.
Early Riser
He joined the Communist Party in 1961, at the age of 30. Yeltsin spent the next two decades rising through the ranks of Sverdlovsk's Communist Party organization, becoming first secretary of the Sverdlovsk Region's Communist Party Committee in 1976.
In 1985, the same year Mikhail Gorbachev came to power, Yeltsin was brought to Moscow and made a member of the Soviet Communist Party's Central Committee. He soon joined the Kremlin's inner sanctum, becoming first secretary of Moscow's Communist Party Committee and a member of the Politburo. But Yeltsin retained a populist touch, which presaged Gorbachev's own democratization campaign.
He rode the subways from time to time, and was fond of turning up at Moscow markets to sample farmers' produce. Just as the first winds of perestroika began to blow, however, Yeltsin broke with his Kremlin mentors.
Yeltsin leaving a Berlin hospital after a check-up in February 2006 (epa)
In October 1987, Yeltsin delivered a scathing criticism of top party leaders before a plenary meeting of the Soviet Communist Party's Central Committee. He was immediately removed from his post as Moscow party boss and kicked out of the Politburo. Gorbachev shunned him. But Yeltsin got his revenge two years later with his election to the Soviet Union's first democratically elected parliament, the Congress of People's Deputies. In May of 1990, Yeltsin was elected chairman of the Russian Republic's Supreme Soviet. A month later, the Russian republic declared its sovereignty within the Soviet Union. The following month Yeltsin terminated his Communist Party membership. A year later, he was elected president of the Russian republic by popular vote.
Moscow was now the capital of two states: Russia and the Soviet Union. But the rivalry would not last long. Yeltsin's defining moment came in August of 1991, when Gorbachev's closest advisers tried to depose the Soviet leader in a ineptly-staged coup. Yeltsin summoned the resistance from atop a tank in Moscow, in the name of the Russian people.
"On the night of August 18 to August 19, 1991, the legally elected president of the country was deposed from power," Yeltsin told the crowd. "Regardless of the reasons used to justify this act, what we are dealing with is a genuine, reactionary, unconstitutional coup. Despite all the difficulties and hardships that our people have known, the democratic process in our country has become broad-based and is irreversible. The people of Russia are becoming masters of their own fate."
Yeltsin going to vote in Russia's first-ever presidential election in June 1991 (TASS)
Wrenching economic adjustment followed, as real wages and domestic production plummeted, and inflation skyrocketed. Shops filled with goods, but mostly for the new rich, who often turned out to be old party bosses, cashing in on their connections. Russia's borders were opened and a free press flourished, but social tensions increased. Yeltsin leading a Moscow rally to celebrate the end of the August 1991 coup attempt (TASS)
Meanwhile, the country lurched from crisis to crisis, with unpaid workers regularly striking and key reform promises remaining unfulfilled. Yeltsin made one final attempt to forge ahead with reforms in the spring of 1998, by removing long-time Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin from power. He replaced him with the young and ambitious Sergei Kiriyenko, who promised rigid belt-tightening measures and crafted plans to collect taxes from Russia's most powerful companies. But the "oligarchs" -- whose economic and political influence had grown much as Yeltsin's powers had ebbed, revolted.