Los Angeles Times

More than 1,000 detained while trying to protest Moscow ballot

- By Sabra Ayres

MOSCOW — Police detained more than 1,000 people including several prominent independen­t politician­s Saturday and blocked the capital’s major thoroughfa­res in an attempt to prevent a protest demanding that opposition candidates be allowed to run in a city council election.

Heavy police presence throughout the city kept what police estimated were at least 3,500 people from participat­ing in the protest. The demonstrat­ion was the latest in a series of protests over the last month against the Moscow city government’s rejection of applicatio­ns from independen­t candidates to run for the 45-seat Moscow city council on the Sept. 8 ballot.

While the protest, and others elsewhere in Russia, was sparked by a feeling of disenfranc­hisement in the local government decisionma­king process, the anger appears to have the Kremlin concerned. Trust in the central government has dropped in recent months, a year after Russian President Vladimir Putin was reelected to a fourth term by a landslide. Much of the hostility is due to Putin’s support for an unpopular pension bill that raises the retirement age by five years. In addition, Russia’s economy is stagnating while real incomes shrink and inflation rises.

Opposition leaders had called for Saturday’s protest to begin in front of Moscow City Hall on Tverskaya Street, a broad avenue lined with Stalin-era buildings that ends at the Red Square and the Kremlin’s red walls.

Hours before the protest, police cordoned off sidewalks near the city hall to prevent people from gathering. Walls of police officers in riot gear locked arms to form columns that pushed demonstrat­ors onto side streets, where small skirmishes between protesters and police ensued. Many were beaten with batons before being dragged into police buses and taken to detention centers.

Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin sent out warnings earlier in the week that Saturday’s protest was unsanction­ed and said participan­ts would be prosecuted. In a tweet Saturday morning, Sobyanin said the opposition was planning provocatio­ns that could put the public’s safety at risk.

Sobyanin’s warning showed that the government was clearly shaken by last weekend’s demonstrat­ion in a Moscow central square that saw 22,000 protesters calling for free and fair elections. The city government had granted a permit for that protest but was surprised when it grew into one of the largest in Moscow since 2012, when tens of thousands demonstrat­ed against election fraud and government authoritar­ianism.

This month’s protests started after the Moscow Election Committee declared ineligible several independen­t candidates’ applicatio­ns to run for a city council seat in a September election. The council currently is dominated by the Kremlin-favored United Russia party.

In recent days, Alexei Navalny, a leading opposition leader and fierce critic of Putin, was arrested and sentenced to 30 days in jail for organizing an unsanction­ed demonstrat­ion. Police then searched the homes of and arrested at least four other opposition candidates seeking to get on the ballot and opened an investigat­ion into their participat­ion in a demonstrat­ion held outside of the election commission July 14.

The protests come at a time when Russians across the country are voicing their frustratio­ns about a lack of local participat­ion in regional issues. In the last two years, large protests with several thousand people have sprung up in regional capitals and in provincial cities outside of Moscow.

 ?? Alexander Zemlianich­enko Associated Press ?? A PROTESTER is taken away during an attempt to demonstrat­e over Moscow’s rejection of independen­t candidates’ applicatio­ns for the 45-seat city council.
Alexander Zemlianich­enko Associated Press A PROTESTER is taken away during an attempt to demonstrat­e over Moscow’s rejection of independen­t candidates’ applicatio­ns for the 45-seat city council.

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