The sacked long-time mayor of Moscow, Yuri Luzhkov, may appeal against his sudden dismissal by President Dmitry Medvedev, a friend has said.
Russian crooner Yosef Kobzon said he had tried to persuade his friend that an appeal would be pointless but Mr Luzhkov would “probably insist”.
The sacked mayor has 10 days to lodge an appeal at the supreme court.
Meanwhile it has emerged that he wrote a scathing letter to Mr Medvedev shortly before his removal.
In the letter, he calls on the Russian president to halt a campaign in the state-run media to discredit him and suggests there is a mood of fear in the country reminiscent of the Stalinist terror.
The Kremlin says Mr Medvedev only read the letter after sacking Mr Luzhkov but it would not have affected his decision in any case.
President Medvedev sacked the mayor of 18 years by decree on Tuesday, saying he had lost confidence in him.
Mr Luzhkov’s removal followed a series of documentaries on state-run TV channels about him and his billionaire property developer wife Yelena Baturina.
Suggestions of corruption – which the couple deny – were made and Mr Luzhkov was also accused of presiding over the destruction of Moscow’s architectural heritage.
Mr Luzhkov’s deputy, Vladimir Resin, is now serving as the caretaker mayor while the Kremlin has made clear it will decide Mr Luzhkov’s successor.
Russia’s powerful former president and current prime minister, Vladimir Putin, who approved Mr Luzhkov’s return to office for a fifth term in 2007, said Mr Luzhkov should have tried to mend his ties with Mr Medvedev.
“It’s quite obvious that there was a strain in the Moscow mayor’s relations with the president, but the mayor is subordinate to the president, not the other way round,” he said in televised remarks.
“[He] should have taken steps to normalise the situation.”
President Medvedev has been out of the country on a visit to China.
Russian news agencies say Mr Luzhkov was seen returning to his office early on Wednesday to clear out his possessions.
“I will need several days to pick up my personal things,” he told Interfax.
“My awards alone take up several cupboards.”
In his letter to Mr Medvedev, published in the opposition magazine New Times on Wednesday, he had questioned the president’s commitment to democracy.
“In our country the fear of expressing your view has existed since 1937,” he said, referring to the Great Terror under Josef Stalin.
“If our leadership merely supports this fear with its statements… then it is easy to go to a situation where there is just one leader in the country whose words are written in granite and who must be followed unquestioningly.
“How does this stand with your calls for ‘development of democracy’?”
Notwithstanding Mr Luzhkov’s letter, some human rights activists welcomed his dismissal.
The former mayor appalled many by his frequent denunciation of gay rights activists – at one point calling them “satanic” – and consistently blocking their attempts to hold rallies.
For this year’s observance of the end of World War II in Europe, Mr Luzhkov had wanted to allow billboards portraying Stalin as a war leader.
Police arrested pro-democracy activist Roman Dobrokhotov and several others on Tuesday evening as they tried to celebrate Mr Luzhkov’s sacking outside the city hall with an unapproved rally.
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