The Monkey
The Freeman
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6584481.stmBoris Yeltsin, who oversaw the Soviet Union's demise and became Russia's first president, has died aged 76, the Kremlin says.
Mr Yeltsin had a history of heart trouble, though the cause of death has not been announced.
He came to power after being promoted by former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, a man he then outmanoeuvred.
He won international acclaim as a defender of democracy when in August 1991 he mounted a tank in Moscow.
He rallied the people against an attempt to overthrow Mr Gorbachev's era of glasnost and perestroika.
But Mr Yeltsin, who became Russia's first democratically-elected leader after Mr Gorbachev resigned in December 1991, saw his later years in office overshadowed by increasingly erratic behaviour and plummeting popularity as the economy suffered.
Mr Yeltsin had a quintuple heart bypass operation following his re-election in 1996.
He announced his retirement on the last day of the 20th Century, handing over to secret service chief Vladimir Putin.
The BBC's diplomatic correspondent Bridget Kendall says ill-health, rumours of a drinking problem and corruption further clouded Yeltsin's presidency.
His love of theatrical gestures was becoming alarming, she says, perhaps never more so than when he grabbed a conductor's baton in Berlin and, apparently inebriated, tried to sing along with the orchestra.
In one of the most dramatic moments of his presidency, Mr Yeltsin ordered Russian tanks to fire on their own parliament in October 1993, when the building was occupied by hardline political opponents.
A BBC Moscow correspondent says Mr Yeltsin will be remembered as the man who brought democracy to Russia.
He presided over Russia's troubled mass privatisation in the early 1990s and also launched the large-scale military intervention in Chechnya in 1994.
Speaking in an interview with Russian television in 2000, Mr Yeltsin said that he saw the lives lost in Chechnya as the biggest responsibility he had to bear.
But he added that there had been no alternative and that Russia had to act against Chechen separatists.
"I cannot shift the blame for Chechnya, for the sorrow of numerous mothers and fathers," he said. "I made the decision, therefore I am responsible."
Reacting to the news of Mr Yeltsin's death, Mr Gorbachev expressed his "very deepest condolences to the family of the deceased on whose shoulders rest major events for the good of the country and serious mistakes", Russia's Interfax news agency reported.
He described Mr Yeltsin's death as "a tragic fate".
The White House paid tribute to Mr Yeltsin, saying he had been an "historic figure during a time of great change and challenge for Russia".
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