Putin critic jailed as mass rallies energize Russian opposition

epa05873584 Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny (L) enters a court room to hear his verdict at the Tverskoy district court in Moscow, Russia, 27 March 2017. A court found Navalny guilty of organizing an unauthorized protest and sentenced him to 15 days of administrative arrest for resisting police during detention. He was also ordered to pay a fine for organizing the banned protest. Navalny was arrested on 26 March, during an non-authorized opposition rally in central Moscow. Thousands of Russians throughout Russia took part in so-called anti-corruption rallies organized by the opposition despite of authorities ban, hundreds of participants were arrested.  EPA/SERGEI ILNITSKY

 

Bloomberg

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was jailed for 15 days after the largest anti-government demonstrations for at least five years energized President Vladimir Putin’s critics as presidential elections loom.
Navalny was imprisoned by a Moscow court on Monday after being convicted of disobeying police and fined 20,000 rubles ($352) for organizing an unsanctioned protest after more than 1,000 people were detained in a wave of demonstrations in cities across Russia on Sunday. Despite draconian laws forbidding unsanctioned rallies, at least 60,000 took part in more than 80 protests, according to the independent Ekho Moskvy radio station.
“You can’t detain tens of thousands of people — yesterday we saw the authorities can only go so far,” Navalny told reporters in the court, where he appeared after being held overnight. “As long as people see tens of billions of dollars being stolen by top officials,” they’ll be ready to protest, he said.
The protests were the largest since demonstrations erupted in winter 2011 and spring 2012 against alleged vote-rigging in parliamentary elections and Putin’s return to the presidency for a third term. Putin, 64, is likely to seek a further six years as president in elections next March, though he hasn’t officially said he’ll run. Navalny, 40, has said he’ll be a candidate, but the Kremlin insists he’s ineligible because of a fraud conviction that the opposition activist has dismissed as politically motivated.

‘Just The Start’
“This is just the start, and the culmination will be nearer to the presidential elections,” Vladimir Milov, one of the opposition leaders, said in a blog posting on Monday. “Now our task is to force them into concessions.”
The protests were a “provocation” and police acted “absolutely correctly, professionally and legally” in dealing with them, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call Monday. Organizers got people to join the demonstrations on the “lie” that they’d been approved by the authorities, he said.
Navalny called the protests after releasing a film online that accused Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev of amassing lavish properties with the help of multibillion-dollar funds. The government, which is struggling to revive the economy after the longest recession in two decades plunged millions of Russians into poverty, has denied the allegations.
Navalny urged the judge at his hearing to call Medvedev for questioning as the “main organizer of the protests” triggered by the allegations, according to his Twitter account. The court rejected his request.

‘Serious Success’
The US and the European Union condemned Russia for breaking up the protests and called for the release of those arrested.
Protesters defied the authorities’ refusal to authorize the rallies. Russian news agencies reported detentions of participants in Vladivostok in the far east, as well as in cities in Siberia and central Russia. In St. Petersburg, organizers said more than 10,000 participated and at least 130 were detained.
Putin’s opponents scored “a serious success” by staging the protests, which drew in young crowds in major cities, said Sergei Markov, a political analyst who acts as a consultant to the Kremlin. “This means that the new phase of the radical opposition will focus not on the elections themselves but on mass street unrest,” he said on Facebook.
Still, given the “dominant grip” of Putin over the domestic political scene, “it’s hard to imagine the latest demonstrations being allowed to get out of control to the point of threatening the regime itself,” Tim Ash, senior strategist at Bluebay Asset Management, said in an emailed note.
Police raided Navalny’s Anti- Corruption Fund as it carried live internet broadcasts of the demonstrations, detaining staff on suspicion of extremism and confiscating all the computers, according to
the fund. Video of the protests placed online by his supporters
had received 3.8 million views by Monday.

Kushner to testify to Senate
Intel Panel on Russia ties

Bloomberg

Jared Kushner will face questioning by the Senate Intelligence Committee as part of its investigations into ties between the Russian government and President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign organization, the panel said on Monday.
Two Senate aides confirmed that Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and a close adviser, will testify, though a date hasn’t been set.
A White House official who insisted on anonymity to discuss a politically sensitive matter said Kushner volunteered to appear before the committee because of his role as the Trump campaign’s primary point of contact with foreign governments. He has not yet received confirmation that he will indeed testify, the official said.
The committee wants to question Kushner about meetings he arranged with Sergey Kislyak, the Russian ambassador to the US, including one with Sergey Gorkov, the chief of Vnesheconombank, Russia’s state-owned development bank. That meeting, and Kushner’s intent to testify to the committee, was first reported by The New York Times on Monday.
The Obama administration leveled sanctions on the bank after Russian President Vladimir Putin’s intervention in Ukraine.

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