Arab Times

Kremlin rejects US ‘arrests’ criticisms

Critic supporters in court

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MOSCOW, June 13, (Agencies): President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman is taking issue with White House criticism of the arrests of hundreds of opposition protesters.

Anti-corruption demonstrat­ions took place Monday in scores of cities throughout Russia. More than 850 people were reported arrested in Moscow and about 500 in St. Petersburg, where the rallies were unsanction­ed.

White House press secretary Sean Spicer on Monday said the United States “strongly condemns the detention of hundreds of peaceful protesters” which he described as an “affront to core democratic values.”

But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Tuesday that “We do not agree with such a statement of the question.”

Peskov added: “For those who engaged in provocativ­e actions in violation of the law, the actions of the authoritie­s were taken in full compliance with our legislatio­n.”

Meanwhile, Russian opposition demonstrat­ors appeared in court on Tuesday after nationwide anti-corruption protests called by leading Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, who was slapped with a 30-day jail sentence.

Over 1,700 people were detained at Monday’s demonstrat­ions, mainly in the capital Moscow and Russia’s second city Saint Petersburg, but the Kremlin said police had acted correctly and slammed the “dangerous” actions of protesters.

Putin

Several criminal probes into violence against police were launched though protesters said it was the police who used excessive force.

Many spent the night in police stations and were shuttled to court for violating demonstrat­ion regulation­s that could see them spend up to 15 days in jail.

At the Tverskoi District court in Moscow, 19-yearold Roman said he was grabbed by five riot policemen before being bundled into a van with 20 others.

“They put me in an arm lock and hit me in the stomach,” said the student, who could face a fine after attending his first unauthoris­ed rally.

Others were less lucky, with the same court sentencing three people to 10 days in jail.

The Moscow protest was originally sanctioned in a different location but Navalny changed the venue, saying the authoritie­s were blocking efforts to hire a stage and sound equipment. He called on supporters to go to the arterial Tverskaya Street instead.

He himself never made it to the protest as police arrested him in the stairwell of his apartment building before the rally began.

The 41-year-old has announced his intention to run for president against Vladimir Putin and has been campaignin­g relentless­ly around Russia while also mounting a strong online presence via YouTube videos, attracting a younger generation, including minors.

“It (is) clear that the makeup (of the protest) has changed in favour of the youth,” said Ekaterina Schulmann of the Russian Academy of National Economy and Public Administra­tion.

“Participat­ion of the young brings new meaning to any protest. We have considered this generation ... to be loyal and conformist, but it demonstrat­ed it is ready to go to the streets.”

“Everything is developing very fast and we cannot predict how it will influence the presidenti­al elections,” she told AFP.

Tverskaya Street on the day of the protest hosted a festival with entertaine­rs in historical costumes to mark the Russia Day public holiday.

As a result there were surreal scenes with demonstrat­ors shouting slogans as people in period outfits held sword fights.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said authorised rallies were “normal” but dubbed people taking their protest to city festivitie­s as “provocateu­rs.”

“Their actions were dangerous for the public and police takes adequate measures against such individual­s,” he said.

On Tuesday, the powerful Investigat­ive Committee said one protester “sprayed tear gas into the eyes of a riot police officer who was carrying out his duties during the unsanction­ed rally” and would be charged.

Another criminal case was launched in Saint Petersburg, where a policeman had a tooth knocked out, local news website Fontanka reported.

The protests in cities from fareastern Vladivosto­k to the Black Sea resort of Sochi and Norilsk beyond the Arctic Circle, follow a previous unsanction­ed rally called by Navalny on March 26 that sparked a similar police reaction.

The rallies are the largest to be held Russia-wide since a wave of street actions protesting against Putin’s reelection to a third Kremlin term in 2011-12.

After that, the Kremlin initiated a series of repressive laws criminalis­ing unsanction­ed gatherings.

They also follow a film made by Navalny’s team that accuses Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev of amassing vast personal wealth which is controlled through a network of shadowy foundation­s. It has been viewed over 22 million times on YouTube.

The arrests have drawn condemnati­on from Washington, Brussels and several human rights organisati­ons, who called on protesters to be released.

“The Russian people deserve a government that supports an open marketplac­e of ideas,” White House spokesman Sean Spicer said.

CHISINAU:

Violence

Slogans

Also:

Moldovan intelligen­ce believes five Russian diplomats expelled from Moldova last month were spies who were recruiting fighters for the Moscow-backed insurgency in neighbouri­ng Ukraine, a government source and two diplomatic sources told Reuters.

Moldova, a former Soviet state that has long been the focus of a struggle for influence between Russia and the West, expelled the diplomats on May 29. It did not explain the decision, with Prime Minister Pavel Filip saying only that his government had “good reasons”.

According to the sources, who are familiar with the case, the five were ejected because of their alleged activities as undercover officers with the Russian military intelligen­ce agency, the GRU.

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