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Thousands Rally in Moscow to Demand Release of Jailed Protesters

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People attend a rally to demand the release of jailed protesters, who were detained during opposition demonstrations for fair elections, in Moscow, Russia Sept. 29, 2019. (Shamil Zhumatov/Reuters)

MOSCOWMore than 20,000 Russians took to the streets of Moscow on Sept. 29 to demand the release of protesters jailed over the summer in what opponents of the Kremlin say is a campaign to stifle dissent.

The protesters were arrested at rallies that flared in July when opposition politicians were barred from a local election. Allegations of police brutality and what many Muscovites saw as harsh jail sentences have sparked an unusual public outcry.

Several people have been sentenced to up to four years in jail, and others are being prosecuted for crimes such as violence toward police officers.

On a rainy Sept. 29, throngs of people waved flags from an array of political groups, chanting “Let them go!” and “Freedom for political prisoners.”

“No one can get a fair hearing in Russian courts—injustice and lawlessness can happen to anyone now,” opposition politician Lyubov Sobol told the protesters over a sound system from a raised stage.

The protests don’t pose a threat to President Vladimir Putin, who won reelection by a landslide in 2018. But they come as his ratings have slipped following years of falling real incomes and an unpopular move to hike the retirement age.

The opposition had hoped for as big a turnout as possible, arguing that authorities would be compelled to release jailed protesters if they felt holding them could dent their ratings further.

The White Counter group, which monitors political protests, said it counted 25,200 people at the rally. Police put the figure at around 20,000.

The demonstration was authorized by the Moscow mayor’s office, unlike several rallies in recent months where police briefly detained more than 2,000 people. No police detentions were reported on Sept. 29.

Public Outcry

In the lead-up to the rally, courts freed one person on bail and dropped charges against another, rare steps that followed a public outcry. But the opposition fears those rulings may be a tactic by authorities to avoid wider concessions.

“I’m sure more people will be released because of this rally,” Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny told his supporters at the protest.

The series of protests began in July when more than a dozen opposition-minded candidates were barred on a technicality from running in a Sept. 8 election to Moscow’s city legislature.

The rallies were the largest sustained protest movement in Moscow in almost a decade, peaking at around 60,000 people, before appearing to lose momentum.

The police say people were detained or prosecuted for breaking the law and that some of the protests had to be dispersed as they had not been authorized and were illegal.

After his allies were barred from the vote, Navalny called on supporters to vote tactically for opponents of the ruling United Russia party, regardless of their political stripe.

United Russia, which supports Putin, lost a third of its seats in the Moscow city assembly, a setback for the authorities that Navalny said was a victory for the Kremlin’s opponents even though the governing party kept its majority.

By Tom Balmforth & Tatiana Voronova

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