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AP:Anti-Putin protests Saturday draw tens of thousands

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  • AP:Anti-Putin protests Saturday draw tens of thousands

    Anti-Putin protests Saturday draw tens of thousands
    By LYNN BERRY and VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV
    Associated Press
    December 24, 2011 2:26PM


    Armenian President Serge Sarkisian, left, and Iranian President
    Mahmoud Ahmadinejad review honor guards during a welcome ceremony at
    the Presidential Residence in Yerevan, Armenian capital on Friday,
    Dec. 23, 2011. (AP Photo/ Hayk Badalyan, Photolure)

    View Gallery MOSCOW - Tens of thousands of Russians jammed a Moscow
    avenue Saturday to demand free elections and an end to Prime Minister
    Vladimir Putin's 12-year rule, in the largest show of public outrage
    since the protests 20 years ago that brought down the Soviet Union.
    Gone was the political apathy of recent years as many shouted `We are
    the Power!'

    The demonstration, bigger and better organized than a similar one two
    weeks ago, and smaller rallies across the country encouraged
    opposition leaders hoping to sustain a broad protest movement ignited
    by a fraud-tainted parliamentary election on Dec. 4.

    The enthusiasm also cheered Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Soviet leader
    who closed down the Soviet Union on Dec. 25, 1991.

    `I'm happy that I have lived to see the people waking up. This raises
    big hopes,' the 80-year-old Gorbachev said on Ekho Moskvy radio.

    He urged Putin to follow his example and give up power peacefully. If
    Putin stepped down now, he would be remembered for the positive things
    he did, Gorbachev said. The former Soviet leader, who has grown
    increasingly critical of Putin, has little influence in Russia today.

    But the protesters have no central leader and no candidate capable of
    posing a serious challenge to Putin, who intends to return to the
    presidency in a March vote. In a fair election, the veteran Communist
    Party leader would pose the strongest threat, and he has joined the
    Kremlin in disparaging the protests.

    Even at Saturday's rally, some of the speakers were jeered by the
    crowd. The various liberal, nationalist and leftist groups that took
    part appear united only by their desire to see `Russia without Putin,'
    a popular chant.

    Putin, who gave no public response to the protest Saturday, initially
    derided the demonstrators as paid agents of the West. He also said
    sarcastically that he thought the white ribbons they wore as an emblem
    were condoms. Putin has since come to take their protests more
    seriously, and in an effort to stem the anger he has offered a set of
    reforms to allow more political competition in future elections.

    Kremlin-controlled television covered Saturday's rally, but gave no
    air time to Putin's harshest critics.

    Estimates of the number of demonstrators ranged from the police figure
    of 30,000 to 120,000 offered by the organizers. Demonstrators packed
    much of a broad avenue, which has room for nearly 100,000 people,
    about 2.5 kilometers (some 1.5 miles) from the Kremlin, as the
    temperature dipped well below freezing.

    A stage at the end of the avenue featured banners reading `Russia will
    be free' and `This election Is a farce.' Heavy police cordons
    encircled the participants, who stood within metal barriers, and a
    police helicopter hovered overhead.

    Alexei Navalny, a corruption-fighting lawyer and popular blogger,
    electrified the crowd when he took the stage. He soon had the
    protesters chanting `We are the power!'

    Navalny spent 15 days in jail for leading a protest on Dec. 5 that
    unexpectedly drew more than 5,000 people and set off the chain of
    demonstrations.

    Putin's United Russia party lost 25 percent of its seats in the
    election, but hung onto a majority in parliament through what
    independent observers said was widespread fraud. United Russia, seen
    as representing a corrupt bureaucracy, has become known as the party
    of crooks and thieves, a phrase coined by Navalny.

    `We have enough people here to take the Kremlin,' Navalny shouted to
    the crowd. `But we are peaceful people and we won't do that - yet. But
    if these crooks and thieves keep cheating us, we will take what is
    ours.'

    Protest leaders expressed skepticism about Putin's promised political reforms.

    `We don't trust him,' opposition leader Boris Nemtsov told the rally,
    urging protesters to gather again after the long New Year's holidays
    to make sure the proposed changes are put into law.

    He and other speakers called on the demonstrators to go to the polls
    in March to unseat Putin. `A thief must not sit in the Kremlin,'
    Nemtsov said.

    The protest leaders said they would keep up their push for a rerun of
    the parliamentary vote and punishment for election officials accused
    of fraud, while stressing the need to prevent fraud in the March
    presidential election.

    Former world chess champion Garry Kasparov was among those who sought
    to give the protesters a sense of empowerment.

    `There are so many of us here, and they (the government) are few,'
    Kasparov said from the stage. `They are huddled up in fear behind
    police cordons.'

    The crowd was largely young, but included a sizable number of
    middle-aged and elderly people, some of whom limped slowly to the site
    on walkers and canes.

    `We want to back those who are fighting for our rights,' said
    16-year-old Darya Andryukhina, who said she had also attended the
    previous rally.

    `People have come here because they want respect,' said Tamara
    Voronina, 54, who said she was proud that her three sons also had
    joined the protest.

    Putin's comment about protesters wearing condoms only further
    infuriated them and inspired some creative responses. One protester
    Saturday held a picture montage of Putin with his head wrapped in a
    condom like a grandmother's headscarf. Many inflated condoms along
    with balloons.

    The protests reflect a growing weariness with Putin, who was first
    elected president in 2000 and remained in charge after moving into the
    prime minister's seat in 2008. Brazen fraud in the parliamentary vote
    unexpectedly energized the middle class, which for years had been
    politically apathetic.

    `No one has done more to bring so many people here than Putin, who
    managed to insult the whole country,' said Viktor Shenderovich, a
    columnist and satirical writer.

    Two rallies in St. Petersburg on Saturday drew a total of 4,000 people.

    `I'm here because I'm tired of the government's lies,' said Dmitry
    Dervenev, 47, a designer. `The prime minister insulted me personally
    when he said that people came to the rallies because they were paid by
    the U.S. State Department. I'm here because I'm a citizen of my
    country.'

    Putin accused the United States of encouraging and funding the
    protests to weaken Russia.

    Putin's former finance minister surprised the protesters by saying the
    current parliament should approve the proposed electoral changes and
    then step down to allow new parliamentary elections to be held. Alexei
    Kudrin, who remains close to Putin, warned that the wave of protests
    could lead to violence and called for establishing a dialogue between
    the opposition and the government.

    `Otherwise we will lose the chance for peaceful transformation,' Kudrin said.

    Kudrin also joined calls for the ouster of Central Election Commission
    chief Vladimir Churov.

    Putin has promised to liberalize registration rules for opposition
    parties and restore the direct election of governors he abolished in
    2004. Putin's stand-in as president, Dmitry Medvedev, spelled out
    those and other proposed changes in Thursday's state-of-the nation
    address.

    Gorbachev, however, said the government appears confused.

    `They don't know what to do,' he said. `They are making attempts to
    get out of the trap they drove themselves into.'


    Copyright 2011 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material
    may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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