Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Putin fires 2 officers in journalist’s drug arrest

- VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

MOSCOW — Russian President Vladimir Putin on Thursday dismissed two senior police officers involved in the arrest of an investigat­ive journalist on drug charges that were later dropped for lack of evidence, in a case that provoked national anger.

The firings, which came a day after arrests at a protest rally in the Russian capital, reflect a careful balancing act by the Kremlin, which seeks to assuage public anger while maintainin­g a tight lid on dissent.

Last week’s arrest of Ivan Golunov on drug-dealing charges he rejected as sham drew an unpreceden­ted show of solidarity, with three top national newspapers publishing front pages demanding his release. The interior ministry dropped all charges against the reporter on Tuesday in a highly unusual move, and asked Putin to dismiss two senior officers who oversaw the case.

The Kremlin on Thursday announced the ouster of Moscow police’s anti-drugs chief, Yuri Devyatkin, and head of the police department for western Moscow, Andrei Puchkov.

The firings come after arrests at an unsanction­ed but peaceful rally supporting Golunov in Moscow on Wednesday.

Moscow police said about 200 people were detained, while independen­t monitoring group OVD-Info said over 500 were taken into custody and some of them were beaten. The vast majority were released quickly without charges.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said Thursday that the Kremlin is aware of complaints about excessive use of force by police and expects an official inquiry to look into that.

Peskov told reporters that the president will consider proposals to revise legislatio­n to prevent police from using drug charges to frame innocent people.

“If such initiative is formulated it will be considered,” he said.

He added that it’s premature to conclude that Golunov’s case highlights an urgent need for sweeping police reforms, saying that the Kremlin would await the results of an official probe.

The decision to drop charges against Golunov and fire police generals responsibl­e for his arrest marked an unusual shift for the Kremlin, which has staunchly backed law enforcemen­t officials in other cases widely seen as trumped up.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States