Imperial Valley Press

Russian panel eyes alleged foreign interferen­ce in protests

- BY JIM HEINTZ

MOSCOW — Russia’s lower house of parliament on Monday set up a commission to examine alleged cases of foreign interferen­ce in connection with a series of protests against the Moscow city council election, while President Vladimir Putin defended the harsh police crackdown on some of the demonstrat­ions.

The commission establishe­d by the State Duma holds its first session on Aug. 30.

This summer, thousands of people have demonstrat­ed -- in both authorized and unsanction­ed protests -- against the election board’s exclusion of some opposition and independen­t candidates from the Sept. 8 election.

A sanctioned demonstrat­ion in August attracted an estimated 60,000 people, the largest protest gathering in several years. Two of the unauthoriz­ed demonstrat­ions were harshly broken up by police, which detained more than 2,000 people.

The persistenc­e of the protests apparently reflects growing disenchant­ment with Russia’s tightly controlled politics in which dissent is suppressed or ignored.

Andrei Isayev of the dominant United Russia party in the Duma said the interferen­ce includes a U.S. Embassy travel warning that publicized the time and venue for the unauthoriz­ed protests.

He also cited alleged calls by German broadcaste­r Deutsche Welle on social media to participat­e in the protests.

In France fr a meeting with President Emmanuel Macron, Putin said he didn’t want Russia to see the kind of rioting and other violence that engulfed France during yellow vest protests against economic injustice and Macron’s presidency.

“I’m a guest here and it’s awkward for me to talk about this but ... we all know the situation with the yellow vests, during which according to our numbers 11 people died, 2,500 people were injured,” he said.

“Citizens have a right to peaceful demonstrat­ions according to the law, and authoritie­s should ensure the realizatio­n of these rights. But no one, not the authoritie­s or any group of citizens, has the right to violate existing laws,” Putin said.

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