Drivers protest Putin in Moscow
MOSCOW Thousands of opposition activists took to their cars Sunday to protest Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s bid to return to the presidency, in a rally held on a Moscow ring road.
About 3,000 cars joined the protest, according to organizers; police said they numbered only 300.
With horns blaring, they drove for about three hours, causing major bottlenecks on the 15-kilometre ring road — known as the Garden Ring — encircling city centre.
Some cars were papered over so they were entirely white — the colour of the anti-putin movement — others were decked with white ribbons and balloons, and some sported snowmen on their roofs in the action dubbed “white ring.”
The operation was organized via social networking Internet sites by the Voters League, set up by journalists, bloggers, writers and artists ahead of the March 4 presidential poll to campaign for democratic elections.
Many passersby including several elderly people, waved white handkerchiefs at the protesters.
“Today is an example of people who ... have come out in the streets of the city to show that we are numerous, that we are afraid of nothing,” said protester Lada Stupishina, 43.
“We want the party of thieves and swindlers that Putin leads to go away,” she added, using opposition figure, blogger Alexei Navalny’s description of Putin’s United Russia party, which is tipped to win the elections.
Organizers hope to attract at least 50,000 people to a protest in the centre of Moscow next Saturday.
Earlier Sunday, the liberal opposition party Yabloko reported that the offices of a Russian regional newspaper it published had been destroyed in a Molotov cocktail attack.
The attack in the early hours of Saturday on the Vecherny Krasnokamsk weekly in the Perm region in the Urals, had destroyed the premises within minutes, Yabloko said on its website.
No one was reported hurt in the attack, which security cameras showed was carried out by a single, unidentified man.
The newspaper’s editor, Olga Kolokolova, heads the Perm region’s branch of Yabloko.
On Friday, Russia’s election commission barred Yabloko’s presidential candidate, Grigory Yavlinsky, from running in a decision bitterly denounced by opposition activists. Washington also expressed disap- pointment at the move.
On Saturday, the Soviet Union’s past leader Mikhail Gorbachev called for a referendum in Russia on constitutional reform to end the “autocracy” he said had emerged under its current political system.
He has also called for Putin to quit politics and for fresh polls to replace the parliament elected in the disputed Dec. 4 legislative elections that sparked the protests.