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Hundreds arrested in protests across Russia

Top Putin critic is detained amid nationwide show of public defiance

- By Andrew Higgins NEW YORK TIMES

Russian police arrest hundreds of people in nationwide anticorrup­tion protests, including opposition leader Alexei Navalny in Moscow, where thousands demonstrat­ed against President Vladimir Putin.

MOSCOW — The Russian police arrested hundreds of people in nationwide anti-corruption protests on Sunday, including the opposition leader Alexei Navalny in Moscow, where thousands gathered for the biggest demonstrat­ion in five years against President Vladimir Putin.

The protest in the capital took the form of a synchroniz­ed walk along a major shopping street to avoid a ban on unsanction­ed stationary gatherings.

It coincided with similar rallies in 99 cities across the country according to the organizer, Navalny’s anticorrup­tion foundation.

All but 17 of these, the foundation said, had been declared illegal by the authoritie­s.

In Moscow, some protesters tried to block security vans with cars, and the authoritie­s deployed riot police and surveillan­ce helicopter­s.

But they mostly avoided the brutal measures used in neighborin­g Belarus on Saturday against protesters in the capital, Minsk, and other cities.

The police in Belarus beat and arrested hundreds of people who tried to gather for the latest in demonstrat­ions against President Alexander Lukashenko, who has been in power since 1994.

The protests in Russia on Sunday — nominally against corruption but also a rare show of public defiance against Putin, who has found a fierce and enduring critic in Navalny — were the largest coordinate­d display of public dissatisfa­ction since antiKremli­n demonstrat­ions in 2011 and 2012, after an election that was tainted by fraud.

Protesters tried to prevent a police van from taking Navalny away and chanted: “This is our city. This is our city.” Others shouted, “Russia without Putin,” and held up pieces of paper denouncing the Russian president and his allies as thieves.

In a Twitter post, Navalny urged his followers to continue with the demonstrat­ion after he was grabbed by police officers as he tried to join the crowds along Tverskaya Street in the center of Moscow.

“Guys, I’m OK,” he wrote in a message in Russian. “No need to fight to get me out. Walk along Tverskaya. Our topic of the day is the fight against corruption.”

The Moscow Police Department said on its website that “around 500” people had been arrested in the city for taking part in an “unapproved public event.”

OVD-info, a group that monitors arrests, said the number of arrests in Moscow was at least 1,000.

 ??  ?? Police detain a protester Sunday in downtown Moscow.
Police detain a protester Sunday in downtown Moscow.
 ?? Ivan Sekretarev / Associated Press ?? Police detain a woman Sunday in Moscow, where thousands joined in anti-corruption demonstrat­ions, including opposition leader Alexei Navalny. All but 17 of the protests in 100 cities nationwide were declared illegal.
Ivan Sekretarev / Associated Press Police detain a woman Sunday in Moscow, where thousands joined in anti-corruption demonstrat­ions, including opposition leader Alexei Navalny. All but 17 of the protests in 100 cities nationwide were declared illegal.

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