Cape Breton Post

Prospects for Russia’s nascent protests unclear after rally

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After calling two nationwide demonstrat­ions in three months that have rattled the Kremlin, it’s clear that opposition leader Alexei Navalny has the ability to bring people into the streets.

What’s less certain, however, is whether the demonstrat­ions can grow into a genuine political movement.

Tens of thousands of people took to the streets Monday in more than 100 cities and towns across Russia to express their frustratio­n with President Vladimir Putin and governing elites who are largely perceived as corrupt and self-serving.

The Moscow rally broke with the tradition of an orderly opposition gathering where middle-aged protesters chanted anti-Putin slogans on a square in Moscow’s periphery.

Instead, the crowd of mostly teenagers and those in their 20s thronged to a main thoroughfa­re in the heart of the capital, chanting “Down with the czar!” and climbing scaffolds and lamp posts.

At least 1,750 people were detained at the protests across Russia, with baton-wielding police in riot gear seizing nearly 900 in Moscow alone.

Navalny, who called for the demonstrat­ions, rose to prominence with his investigat­ions of official corruption and is expanding his reach to a younger crowd by posting his videos to YouTube.

He was detained by police outside his Moscow home before he could even head to the protest. That left no one to lead the rally in the capital. Like the other demonstrat­ions across the country, it was chaotic and lacking in any clear political demands.

Current Russian opposition groups and their leaders don’t seem to hold much attraction for the protesters, said Masha Lipman, an independen­t Moscow-based political analyst. Navalny may have galvanized the protest, but the slogans mostly targeted Putin and government corruption, with only a fraction expressing support for Navalny.

The charismati­c and mediasavvy 41-year-old Navalny was once dismissed as a Moscow hipster with no appeal to people in Russia’s far-flung regions.

In December, he launched his bid to oppose Putin in the 2018 presidenti­al campaign and has spent the past five months travelling all over Russia. He set up campaign headquarte­rs in cities and towns that have not seen any viable political life for decades.

The strategy seems to have paid off: some cities in Siberia, for example, saw their largest opposition protests since 1991.

But Monday’s protests, held mostly in defiance of the authoritie­s, lacked any specific political demands, other than a general message against government corruption.

While not a campaign with specific goals, they could be laying the groundwork to tap into large-scale discontent.

“I wouldn’t talk of a movement — I think it’s a preparatio­n stage since society is getting more political,” says Alexei Makarkin of the Center for Political Technologi­es. “Navalny’s branches in the regions are building the infrastruc­ture of protest.”

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