Opposition leaders who have criticized Putin's administration in Russia have been murdered in Moscow for six years on the 27th, and many people are handing flowers and tightening the administration's opposition side even more. It made me feel a sense of crisis.
It has been six years since the opposition leader Nemtsov was killed by a gun in the center of Moscow, the capital of Russia, 27 days ago, and citizens and opposition officials visited the bridge and handed flowers. I did.
In this case, five men were charged with murder and other charges, but the motives for who directed them are unknown.
Last year, Navalny was attacked by chemical weapons nerve agents over the leaders of Russian opposition forces, and after returning to Japan in January, he was arrested and imprisoned in prison.
A woman who visited Nemtsov's murder scene said, "The situation is only getting worse."
In addition, a young man said, "Mr. Nemtsov fought for freedom, but what we are seeing now is a totalitarian government," and the government's tightening on the opposition side has become even stronger. It made me feel a sense of crisis.
According to the latest poll conducted by an independent polling agency, more than half of people between the ages of 18 and 24 say that Putin "does not want" to continue his next term after 2024. It seems that the opposition to the Putin administration is spreading among young people.