Mass rally for Nemtsov in Moscow

Tens of thousands of people have marched through central Moscow to honour opposition politician Boris Nemtsov, who was shot dead on Friday.

They carried portraits of Mr Nemtsov and banners saying “I am not afraid”.

He had been due to lead an opposition march on Sunday but his killing turned the event into a mourning rally.

Mr Nemtsov’s allies have accused the Kremlin of involvement, but President Vladimir Putin condemned the murder as “vile” and vowed to find the killers.

Opposition supporters gathered at a point not far from the Kremlin before marching past the spot on Great Moskvoretsky Bridge where Mr Nemtsov was killed.

Several thousand people have also marched in St Petersburg.

Flags and flowers

Moscow city authorities had approved a march of up to 50,000 people there.

Crowds gather for the rally - 1 March These placards read: “Heroes don’t die” and “These bullets are for each one of us”
Police assemble near the scene of the shootingThere is a heavy police presence, including at the scene of the killing
Mass rally in Moscow, 1 MarchThe attendance has yet to be confirmed but runs into the tens of thousands

There has been no official figure on turnout yet, with estimates ranging from 16,000 to 70,000.

Many people carried the national flag and flowers to lay at the scene of the killing, which is already piled high with tributes. A few were holding Ukrainian flags.

Some of the placards read “He died for the future of Russia” and “They were afraid of you, Boris”.

Opposition politician Ilya Yashin told Associated Press: “It is an act of terror. It is a political murder aimed at frightening the… part of the population that supported Nemtsov and did not agree with the government. I hope we won’t get scared.”

Another opposition figure, Gennady Gudkov, told Reuters: “If we can stop the campaign of hate that’s being directed at the opposition, then we have a chance to change Russia. If not, then we face the prospect of mass civil conflict.”

Pro-Kremlin activists from the group Anti-Maidan had said they would not disrupt the march.

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At the scene: Sarah Rainsford, BBC News, Moscow

There’s a very sombre mood here, as the crowd gathers to remember Boris Nemtsov. There’s still a deep sense of shock at his killing just beneath the Kremlin walls.

He had been planning a rare opposition rally today – against the policies of President Putin. Instead his friends and supporters have come out to mourn his death.

Mr Nemtsov’s friends are certain he died for daring to speak out against corruption, against Mr Putin’s increasingly authoritarian rule and against the conflict in Ukraine that Russia denies any role in. Boris Nemtsov called it President Putin’s “mad, aggressive war.”

But above all – there’s anger here, at the fervently nationalist mood that Mr Putin’s policies have created. One that’s fanned each day, by state television.

Russia has become a country where critics are labelled traitors. And now, one of the sharpest voices of dissent has been silenced.

‘Contract hit’

Mr Nemtsov called for “honest elections” hours before he was killed

Russia’s Investigative Committee said it was looking into a number of possible motives for Mr Nemtsov’s murder.

They include his opposition to the Ukraine conflict, Islamic extremism – Mr Nemtsov was Jewish – and an opposition “sacrifice” of its leader to destabilise the state and undermine the president.

Presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Mr Putin had noted “that this cruel murder has all the makings of a contract hit and is extremely provocative”.

The investigators offered a reward of three million roubles ($48,000) for information leading to the killers.

Rally in St Petersburg, 1 MarchA rally was also held in St Petersburg. The banner says: “Boris Nemtsov – we won’t forget, we won’t forgive”.

Mr Yashin confirmed that Mr Nemtsov was preparing documents on Russian military involvement in Ukraine before his death.

Mr Yashin said: “For him the conflict between Ukraine and Russia was a real personal tragedy and he was trying to find any way to stop it. And he was trying to find proof that Mr Putin is sending our troops to Ukraine.”

Restricted movement

Mr Nemtsov, 55, had been dining at a restaurant with his girlfriend Anna Duritskaya on Friday night.

They left together to walk to his flat, crossing the bridge, where a white car drew up and Mr Nemtsov was shot four times with a pistol at around 23:40 (20:40 GMT).

Ms Duritskaya has expressed a desire to return to her home country, Ukraine, but her lawyer said her movement had been restricted. Officials said she could be subject to “additional investigative action”.

In a telegram to Mr Nemtsov’s mother, published on the Kremlin website, Mr Putin vowed to bring the killers to justice. He praised Mr Nemtsov’s openness and honesty.

Mr Nemtsov served as first deputy prime minister under President Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s but fell out of favour with Mr Putin and became an outspoken opponent.

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Violent deaths of Putin opponents

April 2003 – Liberal politician Sergey Yushenkov assassinated near his Moscow home

July 2003 – Investigative journalist Yuri Shchekochikhin died after 16-day mysterious illness

July 2004 – Forbes magazine Russian editor Paul Klebnikov shot from moving car on Moscow street, died later in hospital

October 2006 – Investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya shot dead outside her Moscow apartment

November 2006 – Former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko died nearly three weeks after drinking tea laced with polonium in London hotel

March 2013Boris Berezovsky, former Kremlin power broker turned Putin critic, found dead in his UK home.

BBC

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