Irish Independent

Putin back with a bang as Russians take to streets

- Shaun Walker in Moscow

AS THE Kremlin clock struck noon, Vladimir Putin strode through several sets of gold doors along an expanse of red carpet and on to the podium in one of the Kremlin's most lavish halls.

With an expression that flickered between a smirk and a grimace, he laid one hand on a copy of the Russian constituti­on and was inaugurate­d as president of Russia for a new six- year term.

But while inside the Kremlin there was all the pomp and high ceremony, outside, Moscow was cleared as if for a military operation and police detained more than 100 protesters.

A day after a huge rally descended into violent clashes and hundreds of arrests, the police blocked off all the roads down which Mr Putin's cortege would travel. The limousine, flanked by motorcycle outriders, glided towards the Kremlin through eerily deserted streets.

“I consider service to the fatherland and our nation to be the meaning of my life,” said Mr Putin to the packed hall after he had taken his oath. “We want to live and we will live in a democratic country where everyone has the freedom and opportunit­y to apply their talent and labour, their energy. We want to live and we will live in a successful Russia, which is respected in the world as a reliable, open, honest and predictabl­e partner.”

“We will achieve our goals if we are a single, united people,” said Mr Putin, who first became president in 2000 and now returns after four years as prime minister, during which time he was still widely regarded as the most powerful person in Russia.

Even as Mr Putin spoke of unity, opposition activists were being rounded up and arrested.

By the afternoon, police were simply detaining anyone spotted wearing a white ribbon, which has become the unofficial symbol of the opposition to Mr Putin.

In the morning, riot police descended on Jean- Jacques, a faux- Parisian bistro popular with the Moscow intellectu­al class, and arrested patrons at random, tossing them into waiting trucks.

More than 100 people were detained during the day, in addition to 450 detained at the protest on Sunday, which also left 17 people in hospital, including many riot police.

Some male detainees who had not served their compulsory time in the Russian army were ordered to report to conscripti­on points in the coming weeks, in what is perhaps a scare tactic to keep people away from protests.

“Putin looked sad today,” said Sergei Udaltsov, a radical leftist leader who was also arrested on Sunday and released yesterday.

“You can disperse a protest once, you can disperse it twice, but at some point so many people will come out on to the streets that they won't have enough buses or police stations to deal with everyone.”

Guests at yesterday's inaugurati­on included the former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi, as well as the entire top echelon of Russian officials.

Mr Putin's wife Ludmila, who is rarely seen in public, was also in attendance. She looked uncomforta­ble and appeared to be shaking. ( © Independen­t News Services)

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Clockwise from top: police detain a protester in St Petersburg; President Vladimir Putin and his wife leave a church yesterday; the Kremlin's chief of staff Sergei Ivanov, left, and Silvio Berlusconi attend the inaugurati­on ceremony in Moscow yesterday.
Clockwise from top: police detain a protester in St Petersburg; President Vladimir Putin and his wife leave a church yesterday; the Kremlin's chief of staff Sergei Ivanov, left, and Silvio Berlusconi attend the inaugurati­on ceremony in Moscow yesterday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland