When Russian opposition leader and former deputy prime minister Boris Nemtsov was shot to death on Friday in Moscow, the country lost many things. It lost a charismatic and forceful political organizer. It lost a prominent critic of Putin and of his war in Ukraine. It lost a sense that, even if journalists and activists are unsafe in Russia, at least high-profile political leaders did not have to fear for their lives. In a smaller and more immediate way, Russia also lost a leader for a protest rally that Nemtsov had been helping to plan for Sunday in Moscow. Two days after his murder, the rally went ahead, but primarily as a memorial for the man who was to lead it. A smaller rally was also held in Saint Petersburg; mourners gathered in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev as well.
“The bullets are in each of us”
Stunning photos from Russia’s marches for Boris Nemtsov











St. Petersburg
Thousands also marched in Saint Petersburg, Russia's second-largest city. Police have estimated that 6,000 people attended.









Kiev
Small crowds of supporters have also gathered in the Ukrainian capital of Kiev. Nemtsov was critical of Russia's annexation of Crimea and its military involvement in eastern Ukraine. His position was deeply unpopular in Russia, but appreciated in Ukraine, where he was viewed as a politician sympathetic to Ukraine and a contrast with Putin's policies of exerting control over Kiev. Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko called him "a bridge between Ukraine and Russia."














