From the MT:
“Russia
Police Violence in Spotlight After 3,500 Protesters Detained”
Nearly 3,500
protesters were arrested at demonstrations in support of jailed Kremlin critic
Alexei Navalny, a monitor reported Sunday, as authorities probed violence on
the part of both protesters and police. Police clashed with demonstrators in
Moscow as tens of thousands took to the streets across the country on Saturday
following Navalny's call to demonstrate against President Vladimir Putin's
20-year rule. A number of protesters were injured, including a woman in Saint
Petersburg who was hospitalized with a head injury and was in intensive care
Sunday. The West condemned the arrests and "harsh tactics" used
against demonstrators, with EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell saying the
bloc would discuss "next steps" on Monday. Late Saturday the Investigative
Committee, which probes major crimes, said it launched criminal inquiries in
Moscow over the use of violence against law enforcement, hooliganism and
property damage. "Investigators are continuing to study and analyze a
large amount of photo and video materials," the Committee said. In a
separate statement, investigators said Sunday a 36-year-old man hit two
policemen at the Saint Petersburg protest and was detained.
'Woman in
intensive care' But Saint Petersburg prosecutors also said they were
probing violations "on the part of law enforcement" and the use of
force against a woman. The statement was released after local media
published a video showing a middle-aged woman falling to the ground after being
kicked by riot police. In the video, a woman — identified as Margarita
Yudina — is seen asking three policemen in full riot gear why they are
detaining a young protester. One of the policeman then kicks her in the
stomach. Saint Petersburg's Dzhanelidze hospital said Yudina was
hospitalized with a head injury. "She is in a serious
condition," a hospital representative told AFP on Sunday. "She's in
intensive care." Moscow authorities for their part insisted that no
one remained hospitalized in the capital following the rallies. Officials
said in a statement on Sunday that 29 people were taken to hospitals and
received medical assistance after the protests. "No one required further hospital
treatment," the statement said.
The head of the
Kremlin's human rights council, Valery Fadeyev, said most of those detained in
Moscow had been released. He also defended the detentions, saying the protests
were illegal and took place during a coronavirus pandemic. "I see no
violations whatsoever," he said. "These events are illegal." He
also accused TikTok, a Chinese video-sharing app beloved by teens, of
encouraging minors to participate in Saturday's protests. "This calls for
an investigation," he said. Moscow also accused U.S. diplomats of
publishing protest routes in advance of the demonstrations and of promoting a
"march on the Kremlin" and said the representatives of the U.S.
embassy would be summoned by the foreign ministry. A U.S. mission spokeswoman
said U.S. embassies and consulates around the world routinely issue safety
messages to U.S. citizens. "This is a common, routine practice of many
countries' diplomatic missions," she told AFP. The OVD Info monitor said
police seized at least 3,435 demonstrators across dozens of cities, with 1,360
people detained in Moscow and 523 in the second city Saint Petersburg.
'Impressed
and inspired' Saturday's protests
took on an unprecedented geographic scale, spanning more than 100 cities across
the country. Around 20,000 people protested in Moscow and more than 10,000 in
Saint Petersburg, according to AFP estimates. Leonid Volkov, head of
Navalny's regional network, praised the turnout. "I am certainly
proud, very impressed and inspired," Volkov told AFP. Navalny's team is
hoping to stage a new rally next weekend .Putin's most charismatic critic was
detained at a Moscow airport on arrival a week ago from Germany, where he had
been recovering from a near-fatal poisoning with a nerve agent. He is
the target of several criminal probes and supporters fear authorities are
planning to sentence him to a long prison term to silence him.
^ The abuses of
the Russian Police show that Putin and the Russian Government are very, very
scared that the current protests against their Dictatorship could actually lead
to Democracy in Russia. In the past these kinds of protests were given little
to no media attention within Russia and no Russian Government official
statements. That change shows how scared the powers-that-be really are. ^
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