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Christian Science Monitor Moscow
Moscow
was uncommonly tense Wednesday, with tens of thousands of riot police
patrolling the streets and helicopters buzzing overhead, while
opposition leaders promised more flash-mob-type demonstrations to
protest alleged official vote-rigging in last weekend's bitterly contested Duma elections.
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For more than a decade, Russians appear to have quietly accepted Vladimir Putin's system of "managed democracy." The system utilizes a toolbox full of official measures to ensure that only Kremlin-approved parties and candidates get elected, and that the decisive share of votes is always won by the ruling party, United Russia (UR), which has been headed by Mr. Putin for much of its existence.
But on Monday, after official returns showed UR winning almost 50 percent of the votes
– down sharply from the 64 percent it won in 2007 polls – up to 10,000
protesters, informed mainly through social media, converged on the
downtown Chistye Prudhi metro station. They attempted to march to the
Kremlin, shouting slogans like "down with the police state" and "Russia
without Putin." About 300 were detained, and a few such as radical
blogger Alexei Navalny and liberal opposition leader Ilya Yashin were
subsequently handed 15-day prison sentences for "refusing to follow a
lawful police order."
The
next evening, hundreds more jostled with thousands of heavily-armored
riot police on Moscow's downtown Triumph Square, and another 250 were
detained, including former Deputy Prime Minister Boris Nemtsov, a co-leader of the banned liberal PARNAS party, and Sergei Mitrokhin, leader of the liberal Yabloko party,
which officially won about 3 percent of the votes in Sunday's election.
Protest rallies were also reported in other Russian cities Tuesday,
including St. Petersburg, the Volga center of Samara, and the southern city of Rostov-on-Don.
"No
one expected the public mood to snap like this; these rallies caught
everyone by surprise," says Alexander Konovalov, president of the
independent Institute for Strategic Assessments in Moscow.
"What
is most remarkable is that the people we are seeing in the streets now
are not the usual handful of hard-core protesters," who turn out for regular anti-Kremlin rallies on Triumph Square, he adds.
"These
are completely new people, responsible, mature people, who are finally
fed up with the open official lies and manipulations that everyone is
expected to swallow, and see public protest as the only respectable
option. Even a few weeks ago, for these people, taking to the streets
would have been unthinkable. But now they feel pushed against the wall,"
he adds.
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Thursday, December 8, 2011
Russia: Flashmobs May Depose Putin
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