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Moscow Times
April 24, 2008
Putin Unveils Monument to Yeltsin
By Anna Malpas / Staff Writer
President Vladimir Putin called Boris Yeltsin "one of the most striking
politicians of the 20th century" as he honored the former president at the
unveiling of a new monument at his grave Wednesday, the first anniversary of
Yeltsin's death.
Family members and politicians, including President-elect Dmitry Medvedev,
Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov, Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov and the
director of the Federal Security Service Nikolai Patrushev, attended the
ceremony at Yeltsin's graveside in Novodevichye Cemetery.
The new monument was created by sculptor Georgy Frangulyan in the form of the
Russian tricolor flag, which was reintroduced by Yeltsin.
"It is proper that his tombstone is covered with the Russian state flag --
the tricolor, the national flag of Russia, which was returned by Boris
Nikolayevich Yeltsin to our history, our country and our people," Putin said.
Channel One news showed Putin appearing to fight back tears as he watched
Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Alexy II bless the monument.
"Boris Yeltsin traveled a difficult path as a politician and a citizen and in
the course of his life often found himself faced with a complex choice, based on
principles," Putin said during the ceremony. "But his path was as unique as the
fate of our country -- a country which passed through unprecedented
transformations and severe shocks, but which defended its statehood and its
right to free, independent development."
Among those in attendance were Yeltsin's political contemporaries, including
the former president of Kyrgyzstan, Askar Akayev, former Russian prime minister
and now Russian Ambassador to Ukraine, Viktor Chernomyrdin, UES chief Anatoly
Chubais and the first president of Ukraine, Leonid Kuchma.
While these leaders, along with Yeltsin, were part of a period that has been
heavily disparaged in recent official rhetoric, Putin stressed Yeltsin's
positive qualities during the troubled period.
"The stormy 1990s were a time of rapid change and bold, gifted people --
personalities capable of going against the tide, who called for new aims and led
the masses with them," Putin said. "Boris Nikolayevich Yeltsin, without any
exaggeration, belonged to this outstanding constellation."
Yeltsin's widow, Naina, and one of their daughters, Tatyana Yumasheva, laid
roses at the stone memorial.
"The entire family liked the monument immediately," Yumasheva told
journalists at the ceremony, Itar-Tass reported. "The one thing we wanted to
avoid was a portrait in stone."
Yeltsin's memory was also honored in the Sverdlovsk region, where he grew up
and was Communist Party secretary.
Zubkov signed a decree saying Ural State Technical University in
Yekaterinburg, where Yeltsin studied, will now bear his name, Interfax reported.
In addition, Channel One news showed a sign being fixed on a new Boris
Yeltsin Street in Yekaterinburg. The street was formerly called Ulitsa 9
Yanvarya, in honor of a revolutionary event in 1905.
A memorial plaque was fixed on the house where Yeltsin was born in the
Sverdlovsk region village of Budka, bearing his words: "In my life, I have done
the most important thing: Russia will never go back to what it was," Interfax
reported.
Yeltsin is the second 20th-century leader to be buried at Novodevichye
Cemetery, following Nikita Khrushchev. Josef Stalin, Leonid Brezhnev, Yuri
Andropov and Konstantin Chernenko were all buried beside the Kremlin wall.
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