Violent clashes at Russian anti-government protest

Source Independent (UK)

Riot police clashed with opposition supporters on Apr. 15 at the end of an anti-Kremlin protest in Russia's second-largest city, chasing small groups of demonstrators, beating some on the ground and hauling them into police buses. Although city authorities gave permission for the rally in a square on the edge of central St. Petersburg, they banned plans for the demonstrators to march afterwards to the city's government headquarters. Police trucks and helmeted officers blocked the planned march route. At the end of the 90-minute rally, organizers did not call on them to march along the banned route, but suggested instead that they go on their own to the city government building over the next few days. When the rally dispersed, most participants went to a nearby subway station, where clashes broke out. In one, police chased a group that included Sergei Gulyayev, a member of the city legislature who had been arrested at a protest in March. Police grabbed some members of the group and pounded them over the head with truncheons before putting them on buses. In another clash, police charged a group holding a banner professing love for the city. The violence came a day after clashes at a similar opposition protest in Moscow, where police detained at least 170 people. The protests in both cities were called to focus on complaints that Russia under President Vladimir Putin is strangling democracy ahead of upcoming presidential and parliamentary elections. "Yesterday, it became clear that the authorities won't be making any concessions. They have started a war on people," Eduard Limonov, head of the National Bolshevik Party, told the rally. "Putin and his team are sitting on sacks of gold, at the same time the country is breaking apart in all spheres," said demonstrator Sergei Niluopv, a 56-year-old teacher. One of the rally organizers, Olga Kurnosova, told The Associated Press that police detained her near her home a few hours before the demonstration. She said by telephone from a police station that she was held for distributing brochures about the rally, which she said was an artificial pretext because city authorities had given permission for the demonstration. "It's clear that the reason was to keep me away from the demonstration," she said. The weekend protests were part of a series of "dissenters' marches" called by the Other Russia umbrella group that brings together an array of opposition factions including one led by former world chess champion Garry Kasparov. Kasparov was among those arrested in Moscow and was released after being fined 1,000 rubles (about US $38) for disrupting public order. He did not go to St. Petersburg for the rally. Kurnosova, who heads the St. Petersburg branch of Kasparov's United Civil Front, had said that she expected the tough police action in Moscow to provoke a large turnout in St. Petersburg. But the crowd appeared to be less numerous than organizers had hoped for, filling only about half of the area marked off by metal barricades for the rally. Putin, whose second and last term ends in 2008, has created an obedient parliament, and the government has reasserted control over major television networks, giving little air time to its critics.