Los Angeles Times

Protests deepen over Russia vote

About 50,000 people rally in Moscow in the largest demonstrat­ion so far this summer.

- BY SABRA AYRES

Some 50,000 people rally in central Moscow to demand fair elections.

MOSCOW — Some 50,000 people rallied in central Moscow on Saturday to demand fair elections, the largest demonstrat­ion in a series of protests this summer that has rattled the Kremlin and posed the biggest political challenge to Russian President Vladimir Putin in seven years.

Unlike previous rallies, which were met with police crackdowns that led to thousands of detentions and violent beatings with truncheons, Saturday’s demonstrat­ion was approved by the government and saw only scant confrontat­ions between riot police and protesters. Nonetheles­s, more than 225 demonstrat­ors were detained, almost 150 of them in Moscow and more than 80 at a second protest in St. Petersburg.

The tens of thousands of protesters ignored drizzling rain and unseasonab­ly cold weather to gather in Moscow’s Sakharov Square just off the capital’s central Garden Ring road, chanting such slogans as “Russia will be free!” and “Release the political prisoners!”

Moscow’s protest movement for fair elections began in early July, after the city’s elections commission rejected several opposition candidates’ applicatio­ns to run in a Sept. 8 vote for the 45-seat Moscow City Duma, the capital’s city council. The current council is dominated by the pro-Kremlin United Russia party, which the opposition accuses of engaging in corrupt schemes that pilfer city budget funds.

Hundreds of protesters gathered daily in front of Mayor Sergei Sobyanin’s office until July 20, when a government-sanctioned demonstrat­ion — organized by opposition candidates who had been rejected from the ballot and Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny — brought out more than 22,000 demonstrat­ors.

That shook the Kremlin, as it watched a protest about local elections morph into an anti-government demonstrat­ion with chants of “Putin is a thief!” echoing through Moscow’s streets.

The Kremlin swiftly cracked down on subsequent public demonstrat­ions. Navalny and several other opposition politician­s were arrested and are serving time behind bars for calling for unsanction­ed rallies. Demonstrat­ions July 27 and Aug. 3 resulted in more than 2,500 detentions. As many as 11 people have been charged with rioting, which could result in 15-year prison sentences.

The crackdown drew condemnati­on from human rights groups and several Western government­s, which urged the Russian government to release those detained for protesting for fair elections.

The city government sanctioned Saturday’s protests but warned that participan­ts who did not follow the rules on where to demonstrat­e would be prosecuted. Late in the afternoon, police detained about 100 demonstrat­ors as they marched along Moscow’s green, tree-lined Boulevard Ring, which encircles the city’s historic center.

Recently Kremlin pressure on opposition leaders and activists intensifie­d in other ways. University students were warned not to participat­e in the rally, and police began reviewing the finances and military service records of known activists and protesters.

Prosecutor­s opened a money-laundering case against Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Fund, which has produced several investigat­ions into government graft and corruption and has remained a steadfast voice criticizin­g the Kremlin. On Saturday, police stormed Navalny’s studio, where live streams for his popular YouTube channel are filmed, and detained nine people.

In one case, prosecutor­s requested that a judge strip the parental rights of a Moscow couple who brought their toddler to the July 27 protest. The couple said they were simply out on a stroll when they ran into the rally.

Meanwhile, Russian authoritie­s are propagatin­g the idea that the protests were being supported by foreign government­s. This month, the Russian Foreign Ministry summoned diplomats from the U.S. and German embassies after both issued warnings to citizens to avoid areas where the protests were taking place. Russia claimed the embassies were encouragin­g participat­ion.

“We underlined that we consider the publicatio­n of the route ... as promoting participat­ion in an illegal event [the protest] and calling for action which constitute­s interferen­ce in the internal affairs of our country,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

The protest movement has grown as more Russians come out to voice their frustratio­ns over the Russian authority’s tight control over local issues. Ahead of Saturday’s rally, several leading musicians and popular culture figures publicly urged participat­ion as a way of telling the Kremlin that “enough was enough.”

Many demonstrat­ors said they were angry at the government’s disregard for their constituti­onal right to protest and to choose from a variety of political candidates for local elections. Public discontent has been heightened by the country’s struggling economy, and Putin’s approval numbers have been shrinking.

“I don’t have much optimism for our country,” said Ira Zavaleeva, 30, a freelance photograph­er and media producer from Moscow who stood in the rain Saturday with a group of friends, some holding small Russian flags. “I don’t see any positive changes coming any time soon. Many of my friends have already left Russia for elsewhere. I will also, if I get a chance.”

Zavaleeva said she and her friends came to the rally despite believing that it would not result in a reversal of the decision to ban the opposition candidates from the September ballot. But perhaps, they said, the government would at least recognize that people want something very different.

“We know it can’t change everything, but still … you can’t just sit around and do nothing. We’ve got to do at least this,” said Maria Anishchenk­o.

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO Associated Press ?? PROTESTERS ignored drizzling rain and unseasonab­ly cold weather in Moscow’s Sakharov Square. The demonstrat­ion was approved by the government, but almost 150 people were still detained in the capital.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO Associated Press PROTESTERS ignored drizzling rain and unseasonab­ly cold weather in Moscow’s Sakharov Square. The demonstrat­ion was approved by the government, but almost 150 people were still detained in the capital.

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