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Over 1,000 arrested in anti-Putin protests

Published:Saturday | May 5, 2018 | 12:00 AM
Demonstrators carry posters criticising Russian President Vladimir Putin during a massive protest rally in St Petersburg yesterday.

MOSCOW (AP):

Russians angered by the impending inauguration of Vladimir Putin to a new term as president protested yesterday in scores of cities across the country - and police responded by reportedly arresting more than 1,000 of them.

Among those arrested was protest organiser Alexei Navalny, the anti-corruption campaigner who is Putin's most prominent foe.

Police seized Navalny by the arms and legs and carried the thrashing activist from Moscow's Pushkin Square, where thousands were gathered for an unauthorised protest.

Police also used batons against protesters who chanted "Putin is a thief!" and "Russia will be free!"

Demonstrations under the slogan 'He is not our tsar' took place throughout the country, from Yakutsk in the far northeast to St Petersburg and Kaliningrad on the fringes of Europe.

The protests demonstrated that Navalny's opposition, although considered beleaguered by officials and largely ignored by state-controlled television, has sizeable support in much of the country.

''I think that Putin isn't worthy of leading this country. He has been doing it for 18 years and has done nothing good for it," said Moscow demonstrator Dmitry Nikitenko. "He should leave for good."

OVD-Info, an organisation that monitors political repression, said late yesterday that at least 1,029 people had been detained at demonstrations in 19 Russian cities. It said that 574 were arrested in Moscow alone.

Moscow police said that about 300 people were detained in the capital, and there was no official countrywide tally.

Navalny was to be charged with disobeying police, an offence that carries a sentence of up to 15 days, news reports said, though when he would face a judge was not immediately clear. Navalny has served several multiweek stretches in jail on similar charges.