Times of Suriname

Protesters chant anti-Putin slogans at Moscow rally against retirement age plan

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R8SSIA - Thousands protested in central Moscow yesterday against a proposed increase to the retirement age and the crowd chanted slogans critical of President 9ladimir Putin whose approval ratings have been dented by the bill.

The rally organi]ed by the opposition Libertaria­n Party chanted “Putin is a thief´ and “away with the tsar,´ slogans common at anti-Putin and anti-government protests. The retirement age proposal is politicall­y sensitive for Putin, who was re-elected in March, because it has prompted a series of protests across Russia since it was announced on June 14, the day Russia played the first match of its soccer World Cup. Around 90 percent of the population oppose the bill, according to a recent opinion poll, and a petition against it has attracted 3 million signatures online.

More than 6,000 people came to Sunday’s rally some 2.4 kilometers from the .remlin, according to White Counter, an NGO that counts participan­ts at rallies using metal detector frames. Police put the number at around 2,500. People held placards with slogans against the higher retirement age and one read: “stop stealing our future´. Authoritie­s detained two protest organi]ers, 9ladimir Milov, a former deputy energy minister and now an opposition campaigner, told Reuters. The proposal to raise the retirement age, to 65 from 60 for men and to 63 from 55 for women, is part of an unpopular budget package designed to shore up government finances that is backed by lawmakers.

The changes to the retirement age would be introduced gradually, starting in 2019. Officials said the measure should help to raise an average pension in Russia, now at around 14,400 rubles

229.52 . (Reuters)

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