BFF-37 Russian activists take aim at Putin in march against repression

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RUSSIA-POLITICS-OPPOSITION

Russian activists take aim at Putin in march against repression

MOSCOW, Jan 19, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – More than a thousand opposition activists
of various stripes marched in central Moscow on Sunday after President
Vladimir Putin proposed re-drafting the constitution, unleashing political
upheaval.

Protesters — mostly young anti-fascist activists — chanted “Revolution”
and “No to dictatorship” and some carried copies of the constitution.

The annual sanctioned march was called to commemorate the memory of lawyer
Stanislav Markelov and journalist Anastasia Baburova who were gunned down in
Moscow by ultra-nationalists in 2009.

A number of independent local deputies including Yulia Galyamin and
opposition-minded Russians joined the march, carrying copies of the
constitution and chanting “Putin leave!”.

Several people including a protester who carried a placard urging Putin to
quit power were detained by police.

More than 1,400 people took part in the march, said the White Counter
group which monitors political protests.

The march took place after Putin stunned the nation on Wednesday proposing
sweeping amendments to the constitution, the first major changes to the
country’s basic law since it was adopted under Boris Yeltsin in 1993.

The move triggered the resignation of his government.

Many observers have said Putin’s proposals are designed to ensure his grip
on power after he leaves the Kremlin and his critics have accused him of
orchestrating a “constitutional coup”.

Sunday’s turnout paled in comparison to the protests of last summer when
tens of thousands took to the streets of Moscow to protest against the
exclusion of opposition candidates from local elections, leading to wide-
scale arrests and long jail terms for a number of demonstrators.

Local deputy Galyamina said it was important to protest against Putin’s
attempts to cling to power and change the constitution, calling them a “state
coup.”

Writing on Facebook, she said it was just the “beginning of a civil
campaign” of resistance.

But Russia’s top opposition leader Alexei Navalny said on Friday he did
not support rallies in “defence of the constitution”.

“The Russian constitution is abominable,” he said on Twitter, adding it
allowed authorities to usurp power. “No need to protect it.”

Observers have said Putin’s proposals have caught Kremlin critics off
guard and managed to drive a new wedge between members of the Russian
opposition.

BSS/AFP/RY/1910 hrs