Hundreds arrested, including opposition leader, as protesters denounce Putin's inauguration - Action News
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Hundreds arrested, including opposition leader, as protesters denounce Putin's inauguration

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and around 1,600 anti-Kremlin activists have been detained by police during street protests against Vladimir Putin ahead of his inauguration for a fourth term as president.

Alexei Navalny among scores of detainees removed from Moscow's Pushkin Square

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny addresses supporters during an unauthorized anti-Putin rally on Saturday in Moscow. (Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP/Getty Images)

Russian opposition leader AlexeiNavalny and around 1,600 anti-Kremlin activists were detained by police on Saturday during street protests against Vladimir Putinahead of his inauguration for a fourth term as president.

Navalny had called for demonstrations in more than 90 townsand cities across Russia against what he says is Putin's autocratic, czar-like rule.

Before his detention, he briefly addressed supporters incentral Moscow, leading them in chants of 'Down with the Czar!"

"They said that this city belongs to Putin. Is that right?"Navalny asked his supporters. "Do you need a czar?" he asked, eliciting a collective roar of "No!"

Putin won re-election overwhelmingly in March, extending hisgrip over Russia for six more years a tenure of 24 years thatwould make him Moscow's longest-serving leader since Sovietdictator Josef Stalin.

I have the feeling that people are gathering just to let off steam and that nothing will change.- Alexander, anti-Putin protester

Navalny, who was barred from running in the election on whathe says was a false pretext, was detained soon after showing upon Moscow's Pushkin Square, where young people were chanting"Russia without Putin!" and "Putin is a Thief!"

Video footage showed five policemen hauling him to a waitingvan by his arms and legs, a scene that was repeated dozens oftimes with his supporters.

Another opposition politician, Ilya Yashin, said police planned to charge Navalny with disobeying a police officer. The penalty for such an offence, if repeated, can be a fine and up to 30 days in jail.

'Nothing will change'

Navalny, who has been detained and jailed numerous times fororganizing similar protests, said he was proud to have made itto the rally.

One protester in Moscow, wearing a rabbit's mask with thelegend "Czar of the Animals,"said he was unsure what theprotest would achieve.

Russian riot police officers move in to arrest Navalny during the rally, held two days ahead of Vladimir Putin's inauguration for a fourth Kremlin term. (Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP/Getty Images)

"I have the feeling that people are gathering just to letoff steam and that nothing will change," said the 31-year-old man called Alexander, who declined to give his surname.

OVD-Info, a rights organization that monitors detentions,said it had received reports of police detaining 1,599 people across Russia, nearly half of them in Moscow. It cited itssources at the Moscow protest as saying pro-Kremlin Cossacks hadbeaten protesters with leather whips, sparking a fight.

A police spokespersonsaid around 1,500 people had protested inMoscow, of whom around 300 had been detained, the Interfax newsagency reported. Reuters reporters estimated the crowd numberedseveral thousand.

Protests also took place in the Far East, Siberia and St. Petersburg, where Interfax cited the police as saying around 200people had been detained. In the city of Yekaterinburg, around1,500 kilometres east of Moscow, a Reuters reporter saw over1,000 people protesting and shouting anti-Putin slogans.

Troublemaker vs. authoritarian

Backed by state TV and the ruling party, and credited withan approval rating of around 80 per cent, Putin is lauded by supporters as a father-of-the-nation figure who has restorednational pride and expanded Moscow's global clout with
interventions in Syria and Ukraine.

The authorities regard most of the protests as illegal,arguing that their time and place was not approved beforehand, and that the police have a duty to protect public order.

Putin has dismissed Navalny as a troublemaker bent on sowingchaos on behalf of Washington. Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, aclose Putin ally, has called Navalny a political charlatan.

Opposition supporters walk during a protest rally ahead of Putin's inauguration ceremony in St. Petersburg on Saturday. (Anton Vaganov/Reuters)

Putin is due to be inaugurated on Monday in a Kremlinceremony heavy on pomp.

With more than 56 million votes, almost 77 per cent of thetotal, his March election win was his biggest ever and the largest by any post-Soviet Russian leader, something he and hisallies say gave him an unequivocal mandate to govern.

European observers said there had been no real choice in theelection, and complained of unfair pressure on critical voices.Critics like Navalny accuse Putin of overseeing a corruptauthoritarian system and of annexing Ukraine's Crimea illegallyin 2014, a move that isolated Russia internationally.