Khaleej Times

Navalny arrested as thousands take to streets across Russia

- AFP

moscow — Authoritie­s detained Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny and nearly 1,000 of his supporters on Monday, as they mounted demonstrat­ions across the nation against government corruption.

The protests are the second mass action since March called by Navalny, who has announced his intention to run for president next year and has drawn a new generation to the streets through a relentless online campaign.

Over 200 were detained in Moscow and Saint Petersburg an hour into the protest, according to an NGO that tracks arrests, with Navalny himself picked up by police as he was headed to the event.

On central Moscow’s Tverskaya Street, a helicopter hovered overhead as riot police lined up and pushed back against the crowd, grabbing people and leading them to police vans as others shouted “Shame!”, “Putin is a thief!” and “Freedom to Navalny!”

The action also drew thousands to the streets in cities across Russia, with authoritie­s sanctionin­g some gatherings and banning others. Some reports said authoritie­s threatened university students with expulsion if they attended.

The 41-year-old Navalny’s anticorrup­tion videos have needled the country’s most powerful and drawn to the streets crowds unseen since a wave of protests against President Vladimir Putin’s reelection for a third term in 2012.

Navalny, who plans to stand against Putin in presidenti­al elections in March, faces up to 30 days in administra­tive custody for breaking rules on organising demonstrat­ions, according to his lawyer.

The recent rallies were galvanised by a film released by Navalny in early March which accused Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev of controling vast personal wealth through a shadowy network of foundation­s, which has since been viewed over 22 million times.

“Putin has been in power for 17 years and is not planning to leave. He has usurped all power,” said protester Alexander Tyurin, 41.

“Corruption is a system. I work in a constructi­on company and everything is mired in corruption.”

Another protester Yevgeny, 19, said he was expelled from university after participat­ing in a previous rally. “Our government shouts that enemies are everywhere and is becoming closed in on itself,” he said.

“We want turnover among those in power. Pressure on young people has increased.”

Navalny has brought a new generation to the streets through his embrace of YouTube, and his team was broadcasti­ng from a studio set up in Moscow, though the electricit­y was periodical­ly cut forcing the presenter to speak in total darkness.

The head of Navalny’s anti-corruption group FBK, Roman Rubanov, was detained by police who came to his house, arrest tracking group OVD-Info said.

Moscow police said Navalny would be charged with administra­tive offences of resisting arrest and a second violation of demonstrat­ion organisati­on rules. —

 ?? Reuters ?? Police detain a man during an anti-corruption protest organised by Alexei Navalny on Tverskaya Street, in Moscow, on Monday. —
Reuters Police detain a man during an anti-corruption protest organised by Alexei Navalny on Tverskaya Street, in Moscow, on Monday. —

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