List of Kremlin-Linked Deaths Since Nemtsov’s Murder Continues to Lengthen

March 2, 2017
Elena Osipova, artist who survived the Leningrad Blockade of the Nazis takes part in a day commemorating slain opposition leader Boris Nemtsov. Her signs say [L] "Militarization of Russia under full speed. "Those who are too smart to engage in politics are punished by being governed by those who are dumber than they." (Plato) and "Fight Without Arms As He Did - For Peace! Freedom! to Russia, Ukraine and the Whole World; Children wear military uniforms in kindergarten in Russia; PS Russia holds 2nd place in arms sales around the world. Photo by Arseny Vesin

List of Kremlin-Linked Deaths Since Nemtsov’s Murder Continues to Lengthen

Staunton, VA, February 26, 2017 –  On February 26, many people around the world commemorated the second anniversary of the February 27, 2015 murder of opposition Russian politician Boris Nemtsov near the Kremlin, but it doing so, they should not forget all the other journalists, opposition figures or those who “knew too much” who have died since that time, Kseniya Kirillova says.

Appended to her recollections about Aleksandr Shchetinin, the Russian-Ukrainian journalist behind the Novy Region-2 portal who died in mysterious circumstances the day before Nemtsov was killed is a list of those who have died in the intervening period in what appear to be somewhat mysterious circumstances. 

Kirillova notes that this is “only an incomplete list” of “the large number of strange deaths, sudden suicides, and unsolved murders” during this two-year period alone. It includes the following:

· Mikhail Lesin, a Moscow propagandist found death in a hotel room in Washington, D.C., on November 5, 2015. The local coroner ruled his death an accident but that hasn’t answered “a multitude of questions” about what actually happened. 

· Vlad Kolesnikov, a young Russian who committed suicide on December 25, 2015 after being persecuted for his support of Ukraine. As Kirillova writes, he may have died by his own hand, but it would be wrong to call him anything but “a victim of Putin’s Russia.” 

· Aleksandr Shushukin, the deputy commander of Russia’s air strike forces who took part in the seizure of Ukraine’s Crimea, was pronounced dead on December 27, 2015, “from a heart attack.” 

· Igor Sergun, head of the GRU, died of a coronary on January 3, 2016. He lead the Crimean Anschluss and also in June 2013 organized the visit of now ex-US National Security Advisor Michael Flynn to Moscow. 

· Nikita Kamayev, former director of the Russian Anti-Doping Agency connected with the athletic doping scandal, unexpectedly died on February 14, 2016, again reportedly of a heart attack. His death took place less than two weeks after the death of Vyacheslav Sinev, another former head of the same organization. 

· Pavel Sheremet, a Belarusian and Russian opposition journalist, was killed when his car exploded on July 20, 2016. 

· Arseny Pavlov (“Motorola”), a leader of the Donbass militants, died of an explosion in the elevator of his own home. Shortly before that, other separatist commanders, including Pavel Dryomov and Aleksandr Bednov were also “liquidated.”

· Oleg Yerovinkin, a senior official at Rosneft who had been head of the secretariat of Russian vice prime minister Igor Sechin in 2008-2012, died of a heart attack at the end of December 2016. His death appeared suspicious not only because he was linked to the man who prepared the anti-Trump dossier but also because it coincided with the arrest of Russian cyber security experts on charges of spying for the Americans.

· Valery Bolotov, former DNR militant leader, died in Moscow at the end of January 2017 of a  heart attack. 

· Mikhail Tolstykh (“Givi”), another Donbass militant, died on February 8, 2017. 

· Vitaly Churkin, Russia’s permanent representative to the UN, died of a heart attack on February 20, 2017. 

Moreover, there were other cases in which it appears efforts to kill someone fortunately failed, the most prominent of these being the case of opposition journalist Vladimir Kara-Murza who was poisoned on February 2, 2017, but who survived and has now left Russia for medical treatment.

This list, the US-based Russian journalist says, includes “not just opposition figures and journalists, but defectors, informers, potential informers, loyal but excessively fanatic militants and those who simply ‘knew too much.’” It may even include some who just happened to die in exactly the ways the Moscow media have suggested.