The Columbus Dispatch

Russia cracks down to squash Navalny protests

- Daria Litvinova

MOSCOW – Authoritie­s in Russia have taken elaborate measures to curb protests against the jailing of opposition leader Alexei Navalny planned by his supporters for Saturday in more than 60 Russian cities.

Navalny’s associates in Moscow and other regions have been detained in the lead-up to the rallies. Opposition supporters and independen­t journalist­s have been approached by police officers with official warnings against protesting.

Universiti­es and colleges in different Russian regions have urged students not to attend rallies, with some saying they might be subject to disciplina­ry action, including expulsion.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Friday that “it is only natural that there are warnings ... about the possible consequenc­es related to noncomplia­nce with the law” because there are calls for “unauthoriz­ed, unlawful events.”

Navalny, an anti-corruption campaigner and the Kremlin’s fiercest critic, was arrested Sunday when he returned to Russia from Germany, where he had spent nearly five months recovering from nerve-agent poisoning that he blamed on the Kremlin. On Monday, a judge ordered Navalny jailed for 30 days. He faces a yearslong prison term – authoritie­s accused him of violating the terms of a suspended sentence in a 2014 conviction for financial misdeeds, including when he was convalesci­ng in Germany.

Navalny’s supporters have called for nationwide demonstrat­ions on Saturday to pressure the government into releasing the politician, but have come under pressure themselves.

On Thursday night, police in Moscow detained three top associates of Navalny. On Friday, his spokeswoma­n Kira Yarmysh was ordered to spend nine days in jail, and Georgy Alburov was jailed for 10 days. Navalny’s close ally Lyubov Sobol was released Thursday night, but ordered by a court on Friday to pay a fine equivalent to $3,300. All three have been charged with violating protest regulation­s.

More than a dozen activists and Navalny allies in several Russian regions have been detained, as well.

Russia’s Prosecutor General’s office and police have issued public warnings against attending or calling for unauthoriz­ed rallies. The prosecutor­s have also demanded Roskomnadz­or, Russia’s media and internet watchdog, to restrict access to websites containing calls to protest on Saturday.

On Friday, Russia’s largest social network Vkontakte blocked all the pages dedicated to the rallies.

Roskomnadz­or also announced that it would fine social media companies for encouragin­g minors to participat­e in the protests. The move came amid media reports of calls for demonstrat­ions – and videos of school students replacing portraits of President Vladimir Putin in their classrooms with that of Navalny – going viral among teenagers on social network Tiktok.

Russia’s Education Ministry has issued a statement urging parents to “shield” their children from the events on Saturday, stating that “no one has the right to drag young people into various political actions and provocatio­ns.”

And the Investigat­ive Committee has opened a criminal investigat­ion into the “involvemen­t of minors in illegal activity,” accusing unidentified supporters of Navalny of encouragin­g minors to participat­e in the rallies on social media.

Also Friday, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin urged Muscovites not to attend the rally, in a video statement shown by the Moskva24 TV channel. Sobyanin cited coronaviru­s concerns, called the upcoming demonstrat­ion “unlawful” and said that “law enforcemen­t agencies will ensure the necessary order in the city.”

 ?? EVGENY FELDMAN/AP FILE ?? The jailing of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny after his return from Germany has sparked calls for several protests.
EVGENY FELDMAN/AP FILE The jailing of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny after his return from Germany has sparked calls for several protests.

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