USD
41.19 UAH ▼0.2%
EUR
45.13 UAH ▼1.3%
GBP
53.89 UAH ▼1.82%
PLN
10.5 UAH ▼1.38%
CZK
1.78 UAH ▼1.47%
According to Bild Peter Tide, Vladimir Putin should be afraid that oppositionist...

"Even after death": Putin's overthrow will not lead to democracy in Russia - Bild

According to Bild Peter Tide, Vladimir Putin should be afraid that oppositionists can kill him. The removal of Russian President Vladimir Putin from the power of Russian will not probably lead to the establishment of democracy in the country. About it reports political observer Peter Tide in his column for Bild.

Commenting from his departure and funeral of the Russian oppositionist Alexei Navalny, he noted that his mother was not given the opportunity to spend her son on the last way as she would like, and his wife and children did not have to say goodbye to him near his grave. "In Putin's country, you are not free even after death. Yes, Navalny was the last of his kind. Putin has been removed. The new opposition leader must first grow out or get out of the Gulag," the analyst wrote.

At the same time, in his opinion, "there is no restraint of the Kremlin," because he should be afraid of a possible murder similar to the fate of other tyrants. "The military will not be able-or they will not want to get around the mountains of the bodies of young soldiers who return from Ukraine. The pressure of mothers and widows is very large. Any propaganda-nothing compared to the fields to a new form of tyranny.

Then there is hope that there will be someone on the street, ready to lead the group to break through a number of despots in a century, "Tide summarized. On February 16, the Department of Federal Service for the Execution of Sentences (FSVP) of the Russian Federation reported the death of Russian oppositionist Alexei Navalny. It happened in the correctional colony in the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous District. In particular, the man became bad immediately after a walk.

The cause of death was called problems with blood clots. While anesthesiologist-resuscitator Alexander Polupan, who treated the policy in 2020, noted that he had no symptoms that would indicate problems with the vessels. The hearse with the body of Russian opposition Alexei Navalny on March 1 arrived in the temple in Moscow. The attendees met the car with applause.