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Protests erupt across Russia demanding Navalny's release

Published:Saturday | January 23, 2021 | 2:23 PMThe Associated Press
Police detain a man during a protest against the jailing of Opposition Leader Alexei Navalny in Moscow today. Russian police are arresting protesters demanding the release of Navalny at demonstrations in the country’s east. Larger, unsanctioned rallies are expected later today in Moscow and other major cities (AP photo).

Protests erupted in cities across Russia today to demand the release of Opposition Leader Alexei Navalny, the Kremlin's most prominent foe.

Police have arrested more than 1,600 people, some of whom took to the streets in temperatures as frigid as  negative 50 degrees Celsius (negative 58 degrees Fahrenheit).

In Moscow, thousands of demonstrators filled Pushkin Square in the city centre, where clashes with police broke out and demonstrators were roughly dragged off by riot officers in helmet and placed in police buses and detention trucks. Some were beaten with batons. 

Navalny’s wife Yulia was among those arrested.

Police eventually pushed demonstrators out of the square. Thousands then regrouped along a wide boulevard about a kilometre (half a mile) away, many of them throwing snowballs at the police. 

The protests stretched across Russia’s vast territory, from the island city of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk north of Japan and the eastern Siberian city of Yakutsk, where temperatures plunged to negative 50 degrees Celsius, to Russia’s more populous European cities. The range demonstrated how Navalny and his anti-corruption campaign have built an extensive network of support, despite official government repression and being routinely ignored by state media.

The OVD-Info group, which monitors political arrests, said more than 500 people were detained in Moscow today and more than 200 at another large demonstration in St. Petersburg. Overall, it said 1,614 people had been arrested in some 90 cities.

Navalny was arrested on January 17 when he returned to Moscow from Germany, where he had spent five months recovering from a severe nerve-agent poisoning that he blames on the Kremlin. Russian authorities have denied the allegations.

Authorities have said his stay in Germany violated terms of a suspended sentence in a 2014 criminal conviction, while Navalny says the conviction was for made-up charges. 

Support for Navalny widespread

The 44-year-old activist is well-known nationally for his reports on the corruption that has flourished under President Vladimir Putin's government.

His wide support puts the Kremlin in a strategic bind — risking more protests and criticism from the West if it keeps him in custody, but apparently unwilling to back down by letting him go free.
Navalny faces a court hearing in early February to determine whether his sentence in the criminal case for fraud and money-laundering — which Navalny says was politically motivated — is converted to 3 1/2 years behind bars.

Moscow police on Thursday arrested three top Navalny associates, two of whom were later jailed for periods of nine and 10 days. 

Navalny fell into a coma while aboard a domestic flight from Siberia to Moscow on August 20 last year. He was transferred from a hospital in Siberia 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 Soviet-era Novichok nerve agent.

Russian authorities insisted that the doctors who treated Navalny in Siberia before he was airlifted to Germany found no traces of poison and have challenged German officials to provide proof of his poisoning. Russia refused to open a full-fledged criminal enquiry, citing a lack of evidence that Navalny was poisoned. 

Last month, Navalny released the recording of a phone call he said he made to a man he described as an alleged member of a group of officers of the Federal Security Service, or FSB, who purportedly poisoned him in August and then tried to cover it up. The FSB dismissed the recording as fake.

Navalny has been a thorn in the Kremlin’s side for a decade, unusually durable in an opposition movement often demoralised by repressions. 

He has been jailed repeatedly in connection with protests and twice was convicted of financial misdeeds in cases that he said were politically motivated. He suffered significant eye damage when an assailant threw disinfectant into his face.

He was taken from jail to a hospital in 2019 with an illness that authorities said was an allergic reaction but which many suspected was a poisoning. 

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