Members of the Alpha special forces and other law enforcement agencies who defended the Ostankino against anti-Kremlin demonstrators on Oct. 3, 1993, paid tribute to fallen and wounded comrades near the television center at 10:30 a.m.
Nationalists held a memorial service at the same site at noon, while ultranationalists staged an evening rally at the White House, which back in 1993 housed the parliament, the House of Soviets.
A constitutional crisis erupted on Sept. 21, 1993, when Yeltsin dissolved the parliament amid economic turmoil that saw the population’s income halve over the course of a year.
The Constitutional Court declared the decision unconstitutional, and a parliamentary session chaired by Speaker Ruslan Khasbutov impeached Yeltsin and swore in his vice president, Alexander Rutskoi, as the new president.

Days passed without compromise from either side, despite efforts of the Russian Orthodox Church to mediate.

On Oct. 2, protesters blocked traffic on the city’s main streets and constructed barricades.


Service personnel being evacuated Oct. 3 from the House of Soviets, now the White House. (Vladimir Filonov / MT)
Retired General Albert Makashov, gesturing, leads a crowd storming Ostankino on Oct. 3. (Stetsko / MT)
Tensions boiled over on Oct. 3 when anti-Kremlin demonstrators toppled police cordons to storm the parliament building, seized the Mayor’s Office and tried to capture Ostankino.
Rutskoi's supporters respond to his call to storm Ostankino on the afternoon of Oct. 3. (Yevgeny Stetsko / MT)

The military, following Yeltsin’s orders, stormed the House of Soviets in the early hours of Oct. 4, removing anti-Kremlin activists holed up inside and arresting their leaders, including Rutskoi.




(Vladimir Filonov / MT)
Russians remain largely uncertain on whether Yeltsin or the parliament was in the right. A recent poll by the Public Opinion Foundation found that 57 percent could not answer the question, while 20 percent supported the parliament and 9 percent backed Yeltsin.

The events of 1993 serve as a cautionary tale to the ruling authorities today to respect dissent and to learn how to live and work with the the political opposition, a former senior Yeltsin aide, Sergei Filatov, said in a remarks published Thursday in Rossiiskaya Gazeta.

The authorities estimate that 187 people died and 437 other were injured in the deadliest single event of street fighting in Moscow since the 1917 Revolution.

While Yeltsin returned stability to Moscow streets, he did it through bloodshed and the introduction of direct presidential rule, an expanded power that is enjoyed by Kremlin leaders to this day.
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