Boris Nemtsov
Boris Yefimovich Nemtsov (9 October 1959 – 27 February 2015) was a Russian physicist turned politician who implemented market-oriented reforms as governor of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast in the early 1990s and served as First Deputy Prime Minister under President Boris Yeltsin from March 1997 to August 1998, overseeing energy sector privatization efforts.[1][2][3]
Initially aligned with Yeltsin's reformist agenda, Nemtsov co-founded liberal parties and participated in the Union of Right Forces, but after Putin's rise to power in 2000, he emerged as a vocal opposition leader, publishing investigative reports documenting state corruption, embezzlement in projects like the Sochi Olympics, and the economic costs of Russia's military actions in Ukraine.[2][4]
Nemtsov publicly denounced the 2014 annexation of Crimea and the ensuing conflict in Donbas as violations of international law that isolated Russia economically, positioning him as one of Putin's most persistent critics amid a crackdown on dissent.[2][5]
On 27 February 2015, Nemtsov was shot four times in the back while crossing a bridge near the Kremlin in Moscow; five men from Chechnya were convicted in 2017 of executing the contract killing for financial payment, though subsequent investigations revealed he had been under surveillance by an FSB-linked assassination squad for nearly a year beforehand, fueling doubts about the official account's completeness.[6][7][8]