Police detain dozens at Moscow opposition protest

Police officers detain a man during an unauthorised anti-corruption rally in central Moscow on March 26, 2017. PHOTO | ALEXANDER UTKIN | AFP

What you need to know:

  • The latest detentions came after Navalny organised protests in cities across Russia on March 26, most of them unauthorised.

MOSCOW

Police said they detained 29 opposition protesters in Moscow on Sunday, a week after hundreds were arrested during a rally organised by leading Putin critic Alexei Navalny.
"Twenty-nine people were detained by police for breaches of public order," the city police's press service said.

Opposition supporters had begun to walk peacefully along the city's main Tverskaya Street from a central metro station at around 1030 GMT in an event coordinated via social media.

Police in helmets and body armour swiftly moved to halt a protest, which drew around 100 people.

An AFP photographer at the scene said people were detained as they simply walked along the street, without shouting slogans. One man holding a poster was detained first.

The latest detentions came after Navalny organised protests in cities across Russia on March 26, most of them unauthorised.

The largest rally in Moscow saw about 500 people detained according to police, while OVD-Info, a website that monitors detentions of activists, put the total at almost 1,000.

Navalny called the protest over his anti-corruption investigation into Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev linking the latter to huge mansions and vineyards in a video report garnering more than 16 million views on YouTube.

Among those protesting on Sunday was a 16-year-old boy called Pavel Dyatlov who became a symbol of youth protest in last week's rally after being photographed climbing up a lamppost and being detained by police.

Dyatlov told AFP he had come back to protest on Sunday after reading about it on social media, saying the protest was "calling for the current government to stand down, or for early presidential elections."

"We were heading towards Red Square and the police started to push us back," he said before police detained him again.

Witnesses said police targeted people photographed at the previous rally.

"Right from the start I saw that they were detaining children and 'faces from the the media' — you could see they were acting in a targeted way," said 70-year-old Natalya Ponomarenko from the Moscow region, who also attended last week's rally.