Deccan Chronicle

3,000 arrested in pro-Navalny stir

Protesters defied govt warnings on rally, demand release of Kremlin critic

-

Moscow, Jan. 31: Police detained more than 3,000 people across Russia and blocked off the centre of Moscow Sunday in a massive clampdown on protests demanding the release of jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny.

Thousands of protesters defied government warnings to rally from Vladivosto­k to Saint Petersburg in a second weekend of mass demonstrat­ions over the arrest of President Vladimir Putin's most prominent critic.

Navalny was detained at a Moscow airport in mid-January after flying back to Russia from Germany where he was recovering from an August poisoning he blames on the Kremlin.

The 44-year-old anticorrup­tion campaigner is being held in a Moscow detention centre and faces years of potential jail time in several different criminal cases, despite calls from Western government­s for his release.

In moves not seen in years in Moscow, authoritie­s locked down the centre of the capital Sunday, with hundreds of police lining the streets, central Metro stations closed and the movements of pedestrian­s restricted.

Protesters who had hoped to gather outside the headquarte­rs of the FSB security service were instead scattered to various parts of the city as organisers made last-minute changes in locations.

AFP journalist­s saw dozens of protesters detained and taken into police vans. It was unclear amid the chaos how many people took part in the demonstrat­ion. Independen­t monitor OVD-Info said at least 3,062 people had been detained across the country, including

844 in Moscow, and arrests were continuing. It reported more than 4,000 detentions during similar protests last Saturday.

The Russian Union of Journalist­s said around

35 people working for media outlets were also detained on Sunday.

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on Twitter condemned “the persistent use of harsh tactics against peaceful protesters and journalist­s by Russian authoritie­s for a second week straight.” The Russian foreign ministry hit back, accusing the United States of “gross interferen­ce” in its affairs and of using “online platforms controlled by Washington” to promote the protests.

Hundreds marched through the centre of Moscow chanting “Freedom!” and “Putin is a thief!” before arriving outside Matrosskay­a Tishina prison where Navalny was being held.

Several dozen were detained at the prison, with police chasing down protesters in the snow outside the complex.

“The people in power don't want to listen to anything or to anybody,” 34-year-old vet Darya said at the Moscow rally.

In the second city of Saint Petersburg, police closed off the main thoroughfa­re Nevsky Prospekt, shut Metro stations and police cars were parked all across the centre, an AFP journalist reported.

Police were seen roughly detaining several protesters, including one young man who was left with a bloodied head. Local media reported that police used tear gas and tasers in the city, while one policeman reportedly threatened protesters with his service weapon.

“The whole centre is cordoned off,” said Natalya Grigoryeva, who came to the Saint Petersburg rally with her daughter. “And who is this all against, against their own people?”Earlier protesters had rallied in cities including the Pacific port of Vladivosto­k, where dozens escaped the police on the frozen waters of the Amur Bay and danced in a circle.

 ?? — AFP ?? Police detain a man during a rally in support of jailed Opposition leader Alexei Navalny in Saint Petersburg on Sunday.
— AFP Police detain a man during a rally in support of jailed Opposition leader Alexei Navalny in Saint Petersburg on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India