The Jerusalem Post

Moscow police detain up to 30 anticorrup­tion protesters

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MOSCOW (Reuters) – Police in Moscow detained more than 20 anti-corruption protesters who took to the streets on Sunday in a follow-up of last week’s large-scale demonstrat­ions in the Russian capital, according to a Reuters witness.

The turnout was much smaller than at rallies last week, when hundreds of protesters including a prominent Kremlin critic, Alexei Navalny, were detained as they went out to demonstrat­e against corruption, demanding the resignatio­n of Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.

On Sunday, plain-clothes officials and police detained between 20 to 30 people in central Moscow as they tried to organize a march toward the Kremlin, the witness said.

Interfax news agency, quoting police, said 29 people were detained for a “breaching of public order.”

“Now it is obvious that the problem has escalated because there are so many detained in different cities, from Vladivosto­k to Kaliningra­d,” said Ilya Kurzinkov, one of several students from Novosibirs­k in Western Siberia who joined in the rally in support of the Muscovites. “In general, people are beaten, hurt. Even now, here, we see people are being detained, provocateu­rs appear.”

There were some 100 protesters in the center of Moscow, a significan­tly smaller group than at last week’s protests, reckoned to be the biggest since a wave of anti-Kremlin demonstrat­ions in 2011 and 2012.

The protests come a year before a presidenti­al election in which Vladimir Putin is expected to run for a fourth term.

“People have some questions and they have not been given any answers. And when people tried to speak out about it, detentions took place,” said Ksenia, another student from Novosibirs­k.

Before Sunday’s protests, Russian authoritie­s had blocked access to several Internet pages promoting what the government said was “a planned illegal anti-government protest” in or near Moscow’s Red Square.

The organizers of the rally say they are “young people and ordinary students from Moscow” and have nothing to do with Navalny, who is serving out a 15-day jail sentence for his role organizing the March 26 protests.

Among the detainees on Sunday was 17-year-old high school student Roman Shingarkin, whose father is a former member of parliament who supports Putin, a witness said.

An image of Shingarkin sitting on top of a lamppost during last week’s rally became a David-and-Goliath style symbol of defiance.

 ?? (Maxim Shemetov/Reuters) ?? POLICE OFFICERS DETAIN a man while patrolling central Moscow during an antigovern­ment protest yesterday.
(Maxim Shemetov/Reuters) POLICE OFFICERS DETAIN a man while patrolling central Moscow during an antigovern­ment protest yesterday.

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