(MENAFN- AzerNews)
By Vugar Khalilov
Gennadiy Burbulis, 76, a prominent advisor to former Russian
President Boris Yeltsin, died in Baku on June 19, Azernews
reports.
The former deputy prime Minister helped Yeltsin negotiate and
sign the 1991 deal that culminated in the Soviet Union's formal
breakup.
Burbulis died while relaxing in a sauna in one of the hotels in
Baku, Azerbaijan's capital, where he was attending an international
conference.
According to Burbulis' spokesman, Andrei Markov, the politician
died abruptly in Azerbaijan.
'He was not ill, was feeling fine and had just taken part in the
IX Global Baku Forum, which discussed 'Threats to the global world
order,'' Markov told Interfax.
An official statement on the cause of death has not yet been
made.
“Another of the key persons in the European transformation has
left us. Burbulis was influential as few others in breaking with
the Soviet past and trying to build a new and democratic Russia,”
Swedish diplomat Carl Bildt tweeted Sunday.
Burbulis played a key role in leading the new post-Soviet
Russian state as secretary of state and first deputy chairman of
the government from 1991 to 1992.
He was a signatory for Russia, along with Yeltsin, to the
agreement to dismantle the Soviet Union agreed on December 8, 1991,
with the presidents of Ukraine and Belarus. The treaty was signed
in the Belovezha forest, which is now part of Belarus.
Burbulis is the third significant person in the accord to die in
recent weeks. In May, both former Ukrainian President Leonid
Kravchuk and former Belarusian President Stanislav Shushkevich
died.
Since Russia's military campaign in Ukraine began in February,
aspirations for peaceful cohabitation among the three former Soviet
republics have been crushed. In a televised address at the time,
Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that the Soviet collapse
was the result of 'historic, strategic mistakes' made by Communist
leaders.
“It is impossible to restore the USSR. This is nonsense and
utopia,” Burbulis said on the sidelines of the Global Baku
Forum.
The war in Ukraine received the most attention at the
discussion, which reviewed current concerns on the global agenda.
In this regard, it should be highlighted that Russia was
represented at the forum by a few persons, one of whom attempted
not to stick out, which drew even more attention to himself.
Burbulis sought to avoid interacting with forum users and
avoided engaging with media in any manner possible. Perhaps because
the talks at the event were overflowing with pro-Ukrainian
rhetoric, or perhaps because Burbulis represented an entirely other
Russia in Baku. He was no longer powerful and aged much, and Russia
is no longer the same!
Gennadiy Burbulis's personality is widely known and requires no
introduction to anybody who is familiar with Russia's political
life around the turn of the millennium. The politician was Boris
Yeltsin's closest colleague, and he was virtually second in Russia
in terms of impact on state policy.
At the same time, it is important to remember that Burbulis was
the second person in a very different Russia - democratic, open to
the world, and seeking to be among the world's top civilized
governments. Some thirty years later, a very different Gennady
Burbulis came to Baku, visibly older and studiously avoiding
attention to himself.
Burbulis was born on Aug. 4, 1945, in Pervouralsk. He aided
Yeltsin during his rise to lead Soviet Russia in 1990 and then
independent Russia in 1991, as its first president.
From 1993 to 1999, Burbulis was a member of parliament, and
later was vice governor of the Novgorod region.
He was often referred to as Yeltsin's 'Grey Cardinal,' and
played an important political role in the early years of Yeltsin's
first term as Russian president.
However, he fell out of favor in 1993 as a result of criticism
of the political and economic changes he helped design.
He served in Russia's lower house of parliament, the State Duma,
from 1993 to 1999, as a deputy governor of Novgorod region in
2000-01, and as a senator in the Federation Council from 2001 to
2007.
He is survived by his wife, Natalia, and son, Anton.
---
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