And Over To You, Comrade Capitalist Putin ...
"The Kremlin's mistake was to underestimate Navalny's level of support,":[When people saw Navalny's arrest on live TV on his return to Russia on Jan. 17, as well as the online release last week of a documentary about President Putin's alleged corruption], it provided a strong emotional impulse to take to the street."Russian political observer Andrei Kolesnikov, fellow, Moscow's Carnegie Center
A still image taken from video footage shows law enforcement officers speaking with Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny before leading him away at Sheremetyevo airport in Moscow on Jan. 17. (Reuters) |
"I am sick of this government of thieves.""This is a police state that gives nothing to the people. [Putin] builds palaces for himself.""What is this?"68-year-old pensioner Galina Zolina, Moscow"[The protests are] not a knockout blow to the state. We shouldn't start moving into hyperbole, that this is the beginning of the end of Putinism.""[It's a] coalition of the fed-up. People have all kinds of reasons to feel unhappy with the way things are going and [Navalny] kind of becomes the catalyst.""It's hard to maintain the momentum [of the protests] week after week.""One way or another, the state wants to slowly de-legitimize the protests and make them less appealing, and by outlasting them, make opposition look increasingly pointless."Mark Galeotti, London-based Russia analyst, host, podcast In Moscow's Shadows
Russian President Vladimir Putin does a video conference call with university students at a state residence in Zavidovo, Russia, on Monday. (Sputnik/Mikhail Klimentyev/Kremlin via Reuters) |
"Hypocrites continue to inflate the fake Navalny case to interfere into internal affairs of our country.""This is a professionally prepared provocation, encouraged by embassies of Western countries."Russian embassy, U.K., Twitter"That's what terrorists do. They put women and children in front of themselves [accusing demonstrators of placing children at the fore of the protests].""Nothing that is listed there [Black Sea palatial palace] as my property belongs to me or my close relatives, and never did."Russian President Vladimir Putin
Law enforcement officers stand in front of participants during a rally in support of Navalny in St. Petersburg on Saturday. (REUTERS) |
According
to Russian President Vladimir Putin speaking to university students
through a video conference addressing the unrest of unprecedented
numbers of protesters in Russian cities, the mass anti-Kremlin protest
organizers are "terrorists", and there is no need to investigate -- as
Alexei Navalny, returned from Germany to Russia demands -- the
president's personal wealth. An issue that is the stuff of urban
legends, a conspiracy theory launched by those opposed to Mr. Putin's
continued rule, the best president that Russia has ever had and as far
as Mr. Putin is concerned, to be the longest-governing.
The
issue of a Black Sea palace supposedly owned by Vladimir Putin is
nothing but slander, according to the man himself, one that first
emerged years ago, and now reborn to slur his reputation. Reputed to
have cost a billion dollars and described as "Putin's Palace",
the deed to the immense mansion may or may not be in Mr. Putin's
strong-box possession, but state funds were apparently diverted in a
scheme by his loyal allies to invest him with a palace worthy of his
stature, held in trust perhaps for his eventual public ownership.
In 2010, Kolesnikov claimed that a luxurious estate near the Black Sea was for Putin. A Russian website published pictures, including the one above, which it said were of the mansion. The Kremlin denied Putin had anything to do with the building. Reuters is unable to independently verify the authenticity, content, location, source or date of this photograph. |
Tens
of thousands of Russian demonstrators took to the streets on Saturday
protesting against the arrest of Alexei Navalny who was determined to
return to Russia after his convalescence in Berlin, recovering from an
attempted assassination with the use of the Russian military chemical
nerve-agent, Novichok which failed to fatally poison its target. The
second time the poison was used for a similar purpose; the first
occasion in London targeting another Russian dissident who also
recovered as did his daughter, poisoned by default.
For
the most part, state-ordered assassinations -- of journalist-critics,
political critics, oligarch critics, and any high-profile pests who feel
it their right to criticize the Kremlin and Russia's president can be
certain that one way or another an attempt will be made on silencing
them -- are proven to be successful, whether by drive-by shootings,
sharpshooters, poisoning or mysterious disappearances. This was the
ultimate challenge by Navalny, to return to Russia and dare the
Kremlin/Putin to take additional action.
GRAND DESIGNS: One of the pictures described by a Russian website as showing the mansion dubbed “Putin’s palace.” The Kremlin has denied Putin has anything to do with the building. Reuters |
Which
they speedily did, and Putin's current most-prominent and popular
figure of opposition complicating his life now faces trumped-up charges
that in a Russian court, may earn him ten years in prison from his
current pretrial detention. New mass demonstrations in protest of Mr.
Navalny's arrest are scheduled for the coming weekend, similar to
Saturday's protest where over 3,000 people were detained. There were
relatively restrained clashes by protesters against baton-wielding
police with no serious injuries reported.
Mr.
Putin had in his address to the students on Monday, referred to
authorities' claims the opposition had persuaded minors to become part
of the rallies, remarking that young people had no place in such
situations, nor should they be manipulated for the opposition's
political ends. As a master manipulator speaking to young people, the
president obviously knows whereof he speaks. An investigation into the
claims failed to turn up evidence of the presence of young people in the
chanting, determined protest crowd.
Mr.
Navalny and his political group opposing ongoing rule by Mr. Putin,
brought even wider global and internal focus to the situation when they
released a video just hours after Mr. Navalny's arrest, pointedly
accusing the president of amassing wealth for himself, draining the
country's treasury. The immense, sprawling Black Sea mansion was
highlighted as an opulent manifestation of the grandiloquent role Mr.
Putin sees for himself as a modern-day Czar of the Russian Federation.
European
Union foreign policy chief Josep Borrell is set to visit Moscow in the
coming month to impress on the Kremlin that by arresting and imprisoning
the opposition leader, Russia resembles nothing less than a
dictatorship, and to urge the Russian authorities to reconsider this
action in light of the harm they do themselves on the
international stage. An EU meeting of European foreign ministers had
reached the conclusion that a friendly visit and friendly advice to
Russia might turn the situation around.
"The council considered it completely unacceptable and condemned mass detentions and police brutality over the weekend.""We call on Russia for the release of Mr. Navalny."Joseph Borrell, EU Foreign Policy Chief
Riot police drag away a protester in Moscow on Saturday. More than 1,400 people were arrested in the capital alone, with 3,700 arrests reported nationwide. (Corinne Seminoff/CBC) |
Labels: Alexi Navalny, Arrest, Assassination Attempt, Mass Demonstrations, Russian President Vladimir Putin
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