A former member of the Russian parliament also said last month that someone from his inner circle would kill him before “his next birthday.”
As economic sanctions take their toll, “There will certainly be a moment when the fragility of Putin’s regime is felt in Russia,” Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky told journalist Dmytro Komarov in a documentary.
“Then carnivores will eat a carnivore. It is very important, and they will need a reason to justify this. They will remember. They will find a reason to kill a killer.”
Zelensky couldn’t pinpoint a time for the assassination, only saying, “Will it work? Yes. When? I don’t know.”
Ilya Ponomarev, a self-exiled former member of Russia’s parliament, the Duma, had no such hesitation when in January he told Newsweek that Putin would be killed before having a chance to celebrate his 71st birthday on October 7.
“Putin’s power is great, he is an invincible man,” he told the prestigious American weekly. “2022 was the year that this position began to fade. My prediction still stands that he will not see his next birthday.”
Doing away with him would be his associates’ only option, he noted, because they would fear simply arresting him to be stood on trial at the International Criminal Court.
“My personal dream is, of course, to see him in The Hague, but I don’t think he will succeed,” he said. “Those around him will not allow him to go to The Hague, because his testimony could actually harm them greatly. He will be killed.”
Ponomarev served in the Duma from 2007 to 2016. He was the only MP who voted against Russia’s seizure of Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in 2014. He later fled to Ukraine, and was reported by Newsweek in October to be involved with the volunteer Freedom of Russia Legion in Kyiv’s armed forces.
Consisting of native Russians fighting against their former homeland, the group, which was then only two units’ strong, had the hope of one day being able to “destroy the Putin regime and establish a new, free country in Russia,” as one of its leaders said.
Ponomarev also initiated a “Congress of People’s Deputies of Russia” in Poland with several dozen other anti-regime former politicians, which he hopes will take the Duma’s place in a post-Putin government. There is also a rival “Congress of Free Russia” in Vilnius, Lithuania, established by other Putin foes who do not trust Ponomarev.