From the BBC:
“Putin will not attend
Gorbachev's funeral”
(Mikhail Gorbachev (L) and
Vladimir Putin in 2004)
Russian President Vladimir Putin
will not attend the funeral of Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet Union's last
leader, the Kremlin has confirmed. Spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Mr Putin's work
schedule would not permit him to attend the event on Saturday. He said the
Russian leader had paid his respects at the Moscow hospital where Gorbachev
died on Tuesday, aged 91. Gorbachev's reforms helped end the Cold War, but saw
the demise of the Soviet Union, which Mr Putin has lamented.
In 2005, the Russian president
said the break-up of the USSR was "the greatest geopolitical catastrophe
of the [20th] Century". However, in his telegram of condolences to Gorbachev's
family on Wednesday, Mr Putin struck a more conciliatory note, describing him
as "a politician and statesman who had a huge impact on the course of
world history". On Thursday, Russian state television showed Mr Putin
placing red roses beside Gorbachev's coffin in Moscow's Central Clinical
Hospital. "Unfortunately, the president's work schedule will not allow him
to do this on 3 September, so he decided to do it today," Mr Peskov told
reporters.
Gorbachev's funeral, which will
be open to the public, will take place in Moscow's Hall of Columns. Afterwards,
he will be buried at the city's Novodevichy cemetery, next to his wife Raisa,
who died in 1999. Mr Peskov said Gorbachev's ceremony would have
"elements" of a state funeral and that the state was helping to
organise it. Mr Putin will not be the only notable absentee from the funeral.
Many of the foreign leaders who might have been expected to attend are
currently barred from Russian soil, in retaliation for Western sanctions
imposed because of Russia's invasion of Ukraine. Top politicians from the US,
UK, EU, Japan and Canada are among those on the exclusion list, including US
President Joe Biden and UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, as well as the two
candidates vying to succeed him, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak.
Analysis box by Steve
Rosenberg, Russia editor The Kremlin would say, what is all the fuss about?
Vladimir Putin has expressed his condolences to Mikhail Gorbachev's family (in
a brief telegram). He's also laid flowers at Gorbachev's open casket. But,
no, he won't be going to the funeral. The official reason: no space in his busy
schedule. Diary full. That rather unconvincing explanation is fuelling
speculation that, in reality, it's not that Putin has no time, but rather no
desire to attend. In other words, it's a snub. Why might that be? Well,
for a start, to those in power in Russia today, Mikhail Gorbachev is viewed as
having been a weak, indecisive leader who let a superpower - and Russia's
global influence - slip away. What's more, President Putin has been busy
dismantling Mikhail Gorbachev's legacy. Gorbachev opened up the country,
granted freedoms to his people and sought peace and friendship with Western
nations. That's not President Putin's thing at all. He's been taking freedoms
away, supressing democratic institutions and embracing the idea of
confrontation with the West. That - along with the invasion of Ukraine -
is keeping President Putin very busy. No wonder his diary is full.
^ Putin’s “busy” schedule
includes hiding in his Bunker sitting at a 6 foot table too scared to see or
hear anyone or anything as well as learning how many Russians he sent to
Ukraine as cannon fodder. ^
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