Former Russian leader Yeltsin dead
MOSCOW, Russia (CNN) -- Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin has died at the age of 76, the Kremlin said on Monday.
Yeltsin, who had suffered health problems since resigning from office on December 31, 1999, suffered sudden heart failure, medical sources told Russia's Interfax news agency.
The Kremlin said his funeral would take place amid a day of national mourning on Wednesday, The Associated Press reported.
Yeltsin became the first democratically elected president of Russia in 1991 and two months later put down a coup attempt against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.
Former Soviet President Gorbachev said Monday: "I express my deep condolences to the family of the departed. He did a lot for this country, even though he committed serious errors. A tragic fate."
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who Yeltsin nominated as his successor, has called Yeltsin's widow, Naina, to express his condolences, Interfax reported.
One of the images most associated with Yeltsin is that of him sitting on a tank during the raucous street rallies that marked the coup attempt.
"I think that is the image that he would like people to have forever," former Yeltsin adviser Alexander Nekrassov told CNN Monday.
But just two years later, he ordered tanks to storm the Russian White House to oust barricaded deputies who dug in after Yeltsin dissolved parliament, accusing it of blocking reforms. (Full story)
In a later interview, Gorbachev accused Yeltsin of "trampling on democracy."
Yeltsin was both loved and hated by fellow Russians, said Matthew Chance, CNN's senior international correspondent in Moscow. (Watch why Yeltsin's legacy is likely to be mixed )
"[Many] Russians who lived under his power didn't think much of him," Chance said.
A large part of the population blamed him for the overall demise of Russia, Chance said.
In December 1994, Yeltsin sent tanks to stop the fighting in Chechnya in what would become a 21-month conflict. Later he said he couldn't tolerate the "disintegration of Russia," and acknowledged his actions might have been a mistake.
"I feel the pain of every mother's family," Yeltsin said. "My heart bleeds for every victim. It makes me sleepless at night, and no one can help me with that."
Chance said Yeltsin talked about the war in Chechnya as his biggest regret adding that Yeltsin said he felt responsible for the deaths of the Russian soldiers in Chechnya.
Other people remember the more positive aspects of Yeltsin's reign. He played a large part in the demise of the Soviet Union and promoted democratic reform in Russia.
While he was an ideological man who took positive steps to reform his country, Chance said Yeltsin was an inconsistent reformer.
"He was a totally imperfect statesman and certainly had many failings," Chance said.
Yeltsin favored privatization but sweeping corruption put the vast majority of wealth in the hands of a few individuals who "wielded enormous political power." Chance said this upset and angered many Russians who were left with nothing.
MOSCOW, Russia (CNN) -- Former Russian President Boris Yeltsin has died at the age of 76, the Kremlin said on Monday.
Yeltsin, who had suffered health problems since resigning from office on December 31, 1999, suffered sudden heart failure, medical sources told Russia's Interfax news agency.
The Kremlin said his funeral would take place amid a day of national mourning on Wednesday, The Associated Press reported.
Yeltsin became the first democratically elected president of Russia in 1991 and two months later put down a coup attempt against Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev.
Former Soviet President Gorbachev said Monday: "I express my deep condolences to the family of the departed. He did a lot for this country, even though he committed serious errors. A tragic fate."
Russian President Vladimir Putin, who Yeltsin nominated as his successor, has called Yeltsin's widow, Naina, to express his condolences, Interfax reported.
One of the images most associated with Yeltsin is that of him sitting on a tank during the raucous street rallies that marked the coup attempt.
"I think that is the image that he would like people to have forever," former Yeltsin adviser Alexander Nekrassov told CNN Monday.
But just two years later, he ordered tanks to storm the Russian White House to oust barricaded deputies who dug in after Yeltsin dissolved parliament, accusing it of blocking reforms. (Full story)
In a later interview, Gorbachev accused Yeltsin of "trampling on democracy."
Yeltsin was both loved and hated by fellow Russians, said Matthew Chance, CNN's senior international correspondent in Moscow. (Watch why Yeltsin's legacy is likely to be mixed )
"[Many] Russians who lived under his power didn't think much of him," Chance said.
A large part of the population blamed him for the overall demise of Russia, Chance said.
In December 1994, Yeltsin sent tanks to stop the fighting in Chechnya in what would become a 21-month conflict. Later he said he couldn't tolerate the "disintegration of Russia," and acknowledged his actions might have been a mistake.
"I feel the pain of every mother's family," Yeltsin said. "My heart bleeds for every victim. It makes me sleepless at night, and no one can help me with that."
Chance said Yeltsin talked about the war in Chechnya as his biggest regret adding that Yeltsin said he felt responsible for the deaths of the Russian soldiers in Chechnya.
Other people remember the more positive aspects of Yeltsin's reign. He played a large part in the demise of the Soviet Union and promoted democratic reform in Russia.
While he was an ideological man who took positive steps to reform his country, Chance said Yeltsin was an inconsistent reformer.
"He was a totally imperfect statesman and certainly had many failings," Chance said.
Yeltsin favored privatization but sweeping corruption put the vast majority of wealth in the hands of a few individuals who "wielded enormous political power." Chance said this upset and angered many Russians who were left with nothing.