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| A demonstrator holds a sickle as people march along a street and wave flags during an opposition protest in central Moscow on June 12, 2013. |
AFP -
Several thousand people marched through Moscow on Wednesday to support detained
or jailed anti-Kremlin protesters, a day after President Vladimir Putin accused
Washington of supporting a protest movement against him.
Led by
anti-corruption blogger Alexei Navalny, the protest dubbed the "March
Against Butchers" was aimed at supporting twelve activists accused of
violence at an opposition rally last year as well as jailed activists.
"One,
two, three, Putin leave!" and "Russia without Putin", chanted
the protesters as they marched through central Moscow carrying anti-Putin
banners and flags of all hues.
Some wits
chanted "Lyudmila without Putin," in reference to Putin's stunning
announcement that he was divorcing his wife Lyudmila of 30 years.
Some 7,000
to 10,000 people participated in the march, according to AFP correspondents,
while police put the turnout at 5,000 people.
Navalny
joined other prominent Russians like Mikhail Kasyanov, the former prime
minister turned opposition leader, and poet Dmitry Bykov who rubbed shoulders
with liberal and leftist activists amid a heavy police presence.
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Demonstrators holding portraits of detained
activists march
during an opposition
protest rally in central Moscow on
June 12, 2013.
|
"They
are behind bars without any reason," she said. Ten are in jail, while the
11th is under house arrest and the 12th is under oath not to leave the country.
Yury
Kosmynin, a manager, said he wanted Russia to be a democratic country.
"Putin should have been fired a long time ago," he said. "His
place is in prison."
Some at the
march held pictures of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, a former oil tycoon who has been
behind bars since 2003 after he fell foul of the Kremlin for his support of the
opposition.
Others
called on the authorities to free two members of the Pussy Riot punk rock band
who are serving two-year sentences for an anti-Putin stunt in a Moscow church.
"Putin
is a shame for the country" and "Down with the presidential
autocracy" read some of the banners.
The
opposition has been struggling to sustain the momentum of the protest movement
in the face of a tough crackdown on dissenters unleashed after Putin returned
for a third presidential term last May despite huge protests against his
13-year rule.
The march,
timed to coincide with the Day of Russia, a national holiday, comes after Putin
on Tuesday evening accused Washington of supporting the opposition against him.
"Our
diplomatic services do not actively cooperate with Occupy Wall Street, but your
diplomatic service actively cooperates and directly supports (Russian
opposition)," Putin told Western and Russian staff of the English-language
state-funded television channel RT.
"In my
view, this is wrong because diplomatic services should be building relations
between states and not get involved in domestic affairs."
Putin has
earlier accused the State Department of financing the protest movement against
him, acidly saying it was "money thrown to the wind."
Two dozen
people face jail over their involvement in last year's rally in a criminal
probe activists have condemned as a throwback to the Stalin era.
Navalny
himself faces up to 10 years in prison on charges of embezzling half a million
dollars in a timber deal.
Critics say
the trials of the opposition activists are part of an unprecedented clampdown
which has also seen a string of tough laws fast-tracked through parliament over
the past few months.
On Tuesday,
the State Duma lower house passed two controversial bills that impose jail
terms for people promoting homosexual "propaganda" to minors and
those who offend religious believers.



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