From the Los Angeles Times
Russian election protesters detained
They
had gathered to oppose the "fake vote organized by the authorities"
that saw Vladimir Putin's handpicked successor, Dmitry Medvedev, win in
a landslide.
By Megan K. Stack and Sergei L. Loiko
Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
March 4, 2008
MOSCOW —
Protesters who took to the streets of the Russian capital Monday to
demonstrate against the weekend presidential election were roughed up
and carted off in buses by throngs of riot police.
More than 100 activists were detained as they tried to gather in
central Moscow, opposition leaders said.
The protests were planned as a rare show of opposition to the
Kremlin political machine that successfully passed the presidency from
former KGB agent Vladimir Putin to his protege and favored successor,
Dmitry Medvedev.
As expected, Russian voters handed Medvedev a landslide Sunday in
a race that many critics said was over before it began. From the moment
Putin tapped Medvedev as his successor, images of the lawyer saturated
state-run media while his lesser-known opponents scrapped for exposure.
"I came here to protect the honor of my country, which was
humiliated by this fake vote organized by the authorities," said
Svetlana Torskaya, a 68-year-old architect who came out into the snow
to demonstrate against the Kremlin. "They stole the real elections from
us and made us take part in a show."
European election monitors Monday leveled mixed criticism against
the balloting, pointing to problems with voter registration and
complaining of unequal access to media. The election was not free, the
monitors concluded, but the results still reflected the will of the
Russian people.
"We think there is not freedom in this election," Andreas Gross,
head of the monitoring team from the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe, told reporters. The election "amounted, in effect,
to a vote of confidence in the incumbent president."
Medvedev gathered a little more than 70% of the vote, far
outdistancing his three opponents, and in his first public statements
carefully pledged to continue Putin's policies. The new president will
start work in the Kremlin in May, and nobody in Russia really knows how
the power structure will shape up.
Putin, who was prevented under the Russian Constitution from
seeking a third term, has said he will serve as prime minister under
Medvedev. Critics fear he will continue to run the country, using the
new president as a partner or, at worst, a puppet.
Members of Russia's beleaguered opposition had been denied
permission to gather at Turgenevskaya Square, in the heart of the
capital. But leaders went ahead and called for Monday's march to go
forward.
Protesters arrived by subway to find the square sealed off by
soldiers with metal shields and iron helmets. Riot police with clubs
roamed the square in search of possible dissenters. They targeted young
men, grabbing them by their hands and legs and dragging them off to
police buses.
One by one, the activists made their small shows of protest. One
young man pulled a flare from his pocket and lighted it. "We need a
different Russia!" he yelled. Police beat him to the ground and dragged
him away.
Another demonstrator unfurled a banned Bolshevik Party flag over his
head. Others linked arms and repeated the chant, "We need a different
Russia!"
They too were hauled off to the bus.
Nearby, human rights activist Lev Ponomaryov stood talking with
reporters.
"These elections took place the way elections are held in
totalitarian regimes," said Ponomaryov, leader of the organization For
Human Rights.
A few minutes later, he had to stop talking. The riot police were
coming for him too. They ferried him off through the wet snow to the
waiting bus.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times