![]() |
| Hundreds of protesters were detained (AFP Photo/Alexander NEMENOV) |
Moscow (AFP) - Police detained over 800 people at an opposition gathering in Moscow on Saturday, as authorities upped the pressure on top Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny by launching a criminal probe into his anti-graft group.
Crowds
walked along the capital's central boulevards in a protest "stroll"
over the refusal by officials to let opposition candidates run in September
polls for city parliament seats -- a local issue that has turned into a
political crisis.
Most of
those candidates and opposition leaders, including Navalny, are being held by
police following a protest rally last weekend, in which 1,400 demonstrators
were detained -- one of the biggest crackdowns in years.
On
Saturday, riot police were deployed in large numbers in central Moscow, some
shops and cafes were shut, metal barriers were erected, mobile internet was
down for many hours, and a metro station was temporarily closed.
Some 828
people were detained during the rally, independent protest monitor OVD-Info
said.
Police said
only 1,500 people took part in the gathering.
AFP
correspondents said the turnout was likely in the thousands but a precise
estimate was difficult as the protest was spread over several neighbourhoods.
![]() |
| Riot police appeared to outnumber small groups of protesters who were walking along stretches of the leafy Boulevard Ring (AFP Photo/Vasily MAXIMOV ) |
Police
actions questioned
AFP
observed dozens of arrests along the route of the protest, as police formed
human chains and grabbed people indiscriminately.
"They
came and took seven people right in front of me," said 50-year-old Olga
Yakovleva sitting on a bench on a square along the protest route. "I lost
the power of speech... it was just people sitting and talking."
Lyubov
Sobol, an ally of key opposition leader Navalny and currently three weeks into
a hunger strike after being barred from taking part in the election, was
dragged from a taxi and detained as she set off for the rally.
Hours later
she was taken to court where she was fined 300,000 rubles ($4,600) for a
gathering on July 15, and held for further questioning over the protest last
weekend, her team said.
Opposition
candidates who attempted to run in the polls next month argue that the
authorities have arbitrarily declared signatures they gathered to qualify
invalid.
![]() |
Mini-profiles
of main opposition leaders in Russia. (AFP Photo/Robin BJALON)
|
People in
the crowd on Saturday said they just wanted the opposition to have a chance to
compete.
"I
believe everyone should have a right to take part" in the polls,
39-year-old Robert told AFP.
Footage
surfaced of officers in riot gear beating people prostrated on the pavement
with batons, and many officers began to wear masks to prevent activists from
identifying them on photos and videos.
Amnesty
International condemned the "unnecessary and excessive use of force"
and "unfounded" attempts to paint Moscow protest actions as a violent
uprising.
Authorities
have launched investigations into last weekend's "mass riots" and
"violence against police", echoing similar probes into protests
against President Vladimir Putin in 2012 which saw several people jailed.
Protestors
insist their actions are strictly peaceful, and there have been no reports of
damaged property.
New 'laundering' probe
![]() |
| Police were deployed in large numbers in central Moscow (AFP Photo/Alexander NEMENOV) |
New 'laundering' probe
The
opposition had hoped the September polls would bring an end to the monopoly of
Kremlin loyalists in Moscow's parliament.
The body
decides the city's multi-billion-dollar budget but lacks political independence
from mayor Sergei Sobyanin, an ally of Putin.
Sobyanin
has warned the opposition against "new provocations".
Navalny and
other protest leaders say corruption is rife in the capital. His
anti-corruption foundation FBK this week published a new investigation into
Sobyanin's deputy, accusing her of selling prime Moscow property to family
members at rock-bottom prices.
On
Saturday, FBK, which previously made other high-profile investigations into the
questionable wealth of top officials, itself became a target of a new probe
into "laundering" a billion rubles ($15.3 million).
The popular
FBK collects money through donations. Navalny's ally Leonid Volkov dismissed
the allegations as an attempt to stamp out Navalny's national network of
volunteers.
Navalny, currently in jail, was rushed from his cell to hospital last weekend in an incident his personal doctor said could be poisoning with an unknown chemical substance.
![]() |
| Servicemen of the Russian National Guard detained people at the unsanctioned r ally urging fair elections in downtown Moscow (AFP Photo/Vasily MAXIMOV ) |
Navalny, currently in jail, was rushed from his cell to hospital last weekend in an incident his personal doctor said could be poisoning with an unknown chemical substance.
A state
toxicology lab said no traces were found.
President
Vladimir Putin has yet to comment on the situation in Moscow.
#UPDATE The German government says a Moscow police crackdown on peaceful protests "violates" Russia's international obligations and undermines the right to fair elections in the country, a day after hundreds were detained at an opposition rally. https://t.co/3gqhdClBgU pic.twitter.com/aXLx3Kyfvl— AFP news agency (@AFP) 4 augustus 2019





No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.