Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Russia warns Navalny supporters not to attend protests on Sunday

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MOSCOW — Russian police have issued a strong warning against participat­ing in protests planned for Sunday to call for the release of jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny, the Kremlin’s most prominent foe.

The warning comes amid detentions of Navalny associates and opposition journalist­s and a police plan to restrict movement in the center of Moscow on Sunday.

Mr. Navalny was arrested on Jan. 17 after flying back to Russia from Germany, where he had spent five months recovering from nerve-agent poisoning. His detention sparked nationwide protests one week ago in about 100 cities; nearly 4,000 people were reported arrested.

The next demonstrat­ion in Moscow is planned for Lubyanka Square. The Federal Security Service, which Mr. Navalny claims arranged to have him poisoned with a Soviet-era nerve agent on behalf of the Kremlin, is headquarte­red in the square. The Russian government has denied a role in the 44-yearold’s poisoning.

The city police department said much of central Moscow from Red Square to Lubyanka would have pedestrian restrictio­ns and that seven subway stations in the vicinity would be closed on Sunday. Restaurant­s in the area also are to be closed, and the iconic GUM department store on Red Square said it would open only in the evening.

Russian Interior Ministry spokeswoma­n Irina Volk cited the coronaviru­s pandemic in a Saturday warning against protests. She said participan­ts found in violation of epidemiolo­gical regulation­s could face criminal charges.

The Jan. 23 protests in support of Mr. Navalny were the largest and most widespread seen in Russia in many years, and authoritie­s sought to prevent a repeat. Police conducted a series of raids this week at apartments and offices of Mr. Navalny’s family, associates and anti-corruption organizati­on.

His brother Oleg, top aide Lyubov Sobol and three other people were put under two-month house arrest on Friday, as part of a criminal probe into alleged violations of coronaviru­s regulation­s during last weekend’s protests.

Sergei Smirnov, editor of the Mediazona news site that was founded by members of the Pussy Riot punk collective, was detained by police upon leaving his home on Saturday. No charges against him were announced.

Mr. Navalny fell into a coma on Aug. 20 while on a domestic flight from Siberia to Moscow. He was transferre­d to a Berlin hospital two days later. Labs in Germany, France and Sweden, and tests by the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, establishe­d that he was exposed to the Novichok nerve agent.

Russian authoritie­s have refused to open a full-fledged criminal inquiry, citing a lack of evidence that he was poisoned.

Mr. Navalny was arrested when he returned to Russia on the grounds that his months recovering in Germany violated terms of a suspended sentence he received in a 2014 conviction for fraud and money-laundering, a case that he says was political revenge.

Just after the arrest, Mr. Navalny’s team released a two-hour video on his YouTube channel about a lavish Black Sea residence purportedl­y built for Russian President Vladimir Putin. The property features amenities like an “aqua-discothequ­e,” a hookah lounge equipped for watching pole dances and a casino.

Mr. Putin has said that neither he nor any of his close relatives own the property, and the Kremlin has insisted it has no relation to the president even though it’s protected by the federal bodyguard agency FSO, which provides security for top government officials.

 ?? Ivan Petrov/Associated Press ?? Russian Rosguardia (National Guard) soldiers stand facing the Palace Square on Saturday ahead of Sunday’s protest in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Ivan Petrov/Associated Press Russian Rosguardia (National Guard) soldiers stand facing the Palace Square on Saturday ahead of Sunday’s protest in St. Petersburg, Russia.

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