Russians numbering in the tens-of-thousands have risen up in protests to free opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny for the second week in a row of violent confrontation with law enforcement.
#Russia Protests are taking place in dozens of Russian cities, from Vladivostok to Moscow. Some of them are quite massive. This is #Perm, where people were chanting, "Putin is a thief." In Moscow and St Petersburg, roads are blocked. Hundreds have been detained pic.twitter.com/DiKJR32mxH
— Hanna Liubakova (@HannaLiubakova) January 31, 2021
Russian police warn against protests for prison release of Alexei Navalny - https://t.co/uHiriUbNI6 #OANN pic.twitter.com/mFjP1pKXPz
— One America News (@OANN) January 31, 2021
Some 4,500 protesters in 86 cities, including Aleksei A. Navalny’s wife, Yulia Navalnaya, are now detained by the Russian government, the New York Times reports.
Police have deployed in the heart of Moscow to meet the protesters in what the Times calls the "most imposing shows of police force seen in the country’s recent history."
?? "The protesters came despite the Russian winter and official warnings to stay away from the unsanctioned rallies."
— Bloomberg Quicktake (@Quicktake) January 25, 2021
ICYMI: Protests erupted in 60+ cities in Russia on Saturday, against the jailing of Putin critic Alexey Navalny. @Rudnit reports pic.twitter.com/nOUg3HXAXD
Protesters reportedly chanted "All for one and one for all!" as they marched through the streets towards the jail where Navalny is being held.
Crowds, though slightly smaller than last week's, arrived in the thousands in St. Petersburg, Yekaterinburg, Novosibirsk, and others. Though the crowds were not as formidable, law enforcement had stepped up its presence and readiness to clash with columns of Navalny supporters.
The scenes from the protests have been very violent and shocking.
#RussianProtests New video from Kazan, #Tatarstan, where special police keeps the participants with faces in the snow. Putinism obviously enters its agony. @edwardlucas @navalny @Kasparov63
— Rim Gilfanov (@guilfanr) January 31, 2021
#navalnyprotests pic.twitter.com/ZSe4Vezf0u
Chilling scenes on the streets of Kazan, Tatarstan, where a violent police cleanup is underway and protesters are trying to face down batons and shields.
— Matthew Luxmoore (@mjluxmoore) January 31, 2021
Protest monitor @OvdInfo reports 420 arrests in more than 25 Russian cities so far. pic.twitter.com/lzmKjo7v4R
A new mode of protest in Far Eastern Vladivostok, where protesters are forming ring o roses out on ice. (And the letter “N” and “!”, both symbols for Navalny) pic.twitter.com/uebC4LqtLK
— Oliver Carroll (@olliecarroll) January 31, 2021
The persistence of the protests for two consecutive weeks demonstrates the nationwide discontent with the reign of Vladmir Putin and his political hard power approach.
Mr. Navalny, a 44-year-old anticorruption activist, fell into a coma after being poisoned last summer. He recovered in Germany, but when he returned home to Russia he was detained by police and imprisoned.
A Tuesday court hearing resolved in Navalny possibly serving years in prison for the stated reason of parole violations stemming from a 2014 embezzlement case.
Navalny reportedly spoke from the Matrosskaya Tishina detention center in Moscow Thursday, telling his supporters, "The majority are on our side. Let's wake them up," according to Aljazeera.
The Kremlin has deemed any protest demonstrations for his release to be illegal and has threatened those participating in them with jail time, according to the Times.
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