Search This Blog

Russian police arrest dozens at anti-government rallies

Reuters, MOSCOW: Russian police detained several dozen people at
anti-Kremlin rallies in Moscow and St Petersburg on Monday as they
tried to protest against limits to freedom of assembly.

A crowd of about 600 chanted "Freedom, Freedom!" in sub-zero
temperatures on Moscow's Triumph Square, heavily outnumbered by riot
police, who dragged more than a dozen activists off to waiting buses
after detaining them at a metro exit as they headed to the rally.

"This is our democracy. Look at what happens in Russia!" yelled one
youth as black-helmeted OMON riot police arrested him.

Rights activists and Kremlin opponents have staged demonstrations on
the square on the last day of each month with 31 days, in a symbolic
reference to the right to free assembly enshrined under Article 31 of
Russia's constitution.

President Dmitry Medvedev has promised to allow more public criticism
of the authorities since he was steered to power by his close ally
Vladimir Putin, now prime minister, in 2008. But most opposition
groups say little has changed and their activities are still
restricted.

In St Petersburg, police said they had detained about 60 people at a
rally in the heart of city where protestors cried: "We demand freedom
of speech, freedom of assembly and an end to censorship."

Opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, who spent 15 days in jail after a New
Year's eve protest, rallied the Moscow crowd with calls for an end to
Putin's grip on power since he became president in 2000 and later
prime minister.

"The rubbish tip of history awaits Putin just like all dictators," he
told Reuters, raising chants of "Putin resign" and "Russia without
Putin."

Moscow authorities gave permission for 1,000 people to gather, but in
the past police have beaten or detained demonstrators they accused of
infractions at such rallies.

Before the anti-Kremlin protests police detained 11 members of an
opposition group in a weekend raid on their office and apartments,
activists said.

Police linked the searches and arrests to an investigation into
nationalist riots in December near Red Square, law enforcement sources
cited by Kommersant newspaper said.

But members of the opposition Other Russia group said the arrests were
intended to block their participation in the demonstrations on Triumph
Square.

"It was clearly meant to pressure activist so that they don't
participate in today's protests," Other Russia activist Alexander
Averin said, adding that three activists' homes were searched.

Activists were detained and questioned overnight but had all been
released by Monday morning, except for Belarusian citizen Igor
Berezyuk, who was accused of involvement in violent racist rallies on
December 11.

After last month's riots by soccer fans and neo-nationalists who
targeted non-Slavic minorities for attacks, a top Kremlin adviser
blamed liberal freedom-of-assembly demonstrations he said served as an
example to radical groups to take to streets.