BFF-06 Russian opposition leader Navalny jailed for 30 days, as police raid allies’ homes

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ZCZC

BFF-06

RUSSIA-POLITICS WRAP

Russian opposition leader Navalny jailed for 30 days, as police raid
allies’ homes

MOSCOW, July 25, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – Russian police raided the homes of
several opposition politicians on Wednesday soon after top Kremlin critic
Alexei Navalny was sentenced to 30 days in jail, in an apparent bid by
authorities to crush a new wave of protest.

The latest crackdown on Russia’s opposition politicians comes as they
fight to get on the ballot for the Moscow parliament elections in September
amid falling approval ratings for President Vladimir Putin.

More than 22,000 people crowded a Moscow square on Saturday, the largest
such demonstration in years, as anger grows over authorities’ refusal to put
popular independent candidates on the ballot.

Navalny has called for an even bigger rally, near the Moscow mayor’s
office, on July 27 if the authorities do not register the opposition
candidates.

The opposition said the authorities launched a new crackdown to thwart
those plans.

On Wednesday night, police raided the homes of Dmitry Gudkov and Ivan
Zhdanov, Navalny’s allies and independent would-be candidates who were banned
from running in the September election, on what they say are spurious
grounds.

Gudkov’s father and former lawmaker, Gennady Gudkov, said about 10 people
searched his son’s apartment and wanted to take him in for questioning.

“Bastards,” he said in a barrage of emotional messages on Twitter, adding
that an investigator also wanted to question him in the morning.

“After Gudkov investigators came to search Ivan Zhdanov’s place. At night
which directly violates the law,” Ilya Yashin, a prominent opposition
politician and fellow would-be candidate, said on Twitter.

The nighttime raids were linked to a new criminal case into obstructing
the work of election officials after Navalny’s allies and ordinary Muscovites
staged a series of pickets and rallies outside the offices of the Moscow
election commission and elsewhere in recent days.

For that offence organisers could face up to five years in prison.

Investigators said earlier Wednesday they would “question the organisers
and participants of unauthorised rallies and pickets”.

The protests involved “threats to use violence against members of the
electoral commissions”, the Investigative Committee said.

– Protest call –

Earlier Wednesday, a court sentenced Navalny to 30 days in jail for calls
to stage an unauthorised rally.

A coordinator from Navalny’s Moscow headquarters, Oleg Stepanov, was also
detained and sentenced to eight days in jail.

Navalny was detained Wednesday as he was leaving his Moscow home to go
jogging and buy flowers for his wife’s birthday.

“People are right when they say that sport is not always good for your
health,” the 43-year-old quipped.

This month Navalny has already served a 10-day jail sentence for violating
a protest law.

The opposition politicians say they were made to jump through countless
hoops to get on the ballot, and each had to collect roughly 5,000 signatures
to be eligible.

But electoral authorities still refused to register the representatives of
the opposition, accusing them of faking some of the signatures.

On Tuesday, the disqualified politicians met the country’s election chief,
Ella Pamfilova, who admitted that the situation was “unfair”.

The talks however led nowhere, the opposition said.

– ‘City Hall is afraid’ –

Saturday’s rally in Moscow was the largest such demonstration since 2012,
when tens of thousands protested election fraud during parliamentary polls.

Yashin, who is a local councillor, expressed hope that Navalny’s arrest
would further mobilise people.

“Just think about it: a mere demand to put representatives of the
opposition on the ballot papers triggers a use of force scenario,” Yashin
said on Facebook.

Another independent would-be candidate, Konstantin Jankauskas, said the
crackdown was an attempt to discourage people from attending the new rally on
Saturday.

“It means City Hall is afraid that a lot of people would turn up,” he said
on Twitter.

Political commentator Alexander Kynev said the authorities want to nip in
the bud the new protest wave.

“If this does not help and a lot of people turn up on Saturday then
they’ll think what to do next,” he told AFP.

BSS/AFP/AU/07:50 hrs