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In Aleksei Navalny Protests, Russia Faces Biggest Dissent in Years

Demonstrations in support of the jailed opposition leader swept the nation, beginning in the Far East, where people braved subzero temperatures, and reaching the capital. Arrests climbed into the thousands.

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Demonstrators clashing with the police on Saturday in Moscow.Credit...Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

From the frozen streets of Russia’s Far East and Siberia to the grand plazas of Moscow and St. Petersburg, tens of thousands of Russians rallied in support of the jailed opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny on Saturday in the biggest nationwide showdown in years between the Russian authorities and critics of the Kremlin.

The protests largely drew young Russians and did not immediately pose a dire threat to President Vladimir V. Putin’s grip on power. But their broad scope signaled widespread fatigue with the stagnant, corruption-plagued political order that Mr. Putin has presided over for two decades.

On the island of Sakhalin, just north of Japan, hundreds gathered in front of the regional government building and chanted, “Putin is a thief!” More than 12 hours later, as tens of thousands of protesters dispersed in central Moscow, some of them pelted the police with snowballs and kicked at a car belonging to the domestic intelligence agency.

By early evening, more than 3,100 people had been arrested in 109 cities across the country, according to OVD-Info, an activist group that tracks detentions at protests. Among those taken into custody in Moscow — and later released — was Mr. Navalny’s wife, Yulia, who posted a photo of herself in a police wagon on Instagram.

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Demonstrators across Russia clashed with the police on Saturday as they turned out in support of the jailed opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny.CreditCredit...Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

Vasily Zimin, a 47-year-old partner in a Moscow law firm who trudged through the slush Saturday, said he was protesting rampant corruption during Mr. Putin’s time in power. Taking to the streets, he said, was the only way to effect change.

“The cup is full,” he said, adding: “How can you say, ‘I can’t take any more of this’ while sitting on your couch?”

In Moscow’s Pushkin Square, people flanked in every direction by riot police officers chanted “Freedom!” as passing drivers honked their horns in support. Tensions rose in late day, with some protesters marching to the jail where Mr. Navalny was being held, only to be driven away by baton-wielding police.

By 9 p.m. in Moscow, the protests had largely died down. But Leonid Volkov, a top aide to Mr. Navalny, said that more demonstrations are planned for next weekend.

“Without a doubt this whole story is just beginning,” Mr. Volkov said in a live YouTube video broadcast from an undisclosed location outside Russia.

It appeared to be the biggest day of protest across the country since at least 2017, though it was far from clear whether the show of dissent would push the Kremlin to change course. A report on state television called the protests a “wave of aggression” and warned that jail time loomed for some participants.

“Attacking a police officer is a criminal offense,” the news report said. “Hundreds of videos were shot. All the faces are on them.”

In the cities of Vladivostok on the Pacific Ocean and Irkutsk and Novosibirsk in Siberia, footage showed crowds of well over 1,000 people chanting, “We are in charge here!” and “We won’t leave!”

In Yakutsk, the world’s coldest city, scores of protesters in the freezing fog braved temperatures of minus-60 Fahrenheit. In Khabarovsk, the city on the Chinese border that was the site of anti-Kremlin protests last summer, hundreds who returned to the streets were met with an overwhelming force of riot police officers.

“I was never a big supporter of Navalny, and yet I understand perfectly well that this is a very serious situation,” Vitaliy Blazhevich, 57, a university teacher, said in a telephone interview about why he had come out to rally for Mr. Navalny in Khabarovsk.

“There’s always hope that something will change,” Mr. Blazhevich said.

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The opposition leader Aleksei Navalny being escorted from a police station in Khimki, outside Moscow, on Monday.Credit...Alexander Nemenov/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Aleksei Navalny, a 44-year-old anticorruption activist who is the most prominent domestic critic of President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, was poisoned with a military-grade nerve agent in Siberia in August in what Western officials have described as an assassination attempt by the Russian state.

He was airlifted to Germany and recovered. And last Sunday, after flying home to Moscow, he was arrested at passport control.

The Russian authorities say Mr. Navalny violated the parole terms from a suspended sentence he received six years ago, and are seeking to confine him on a yearslong prison term.

After he was jailed for an initial term of 30 days on Monday, his supporters called for protests — arguing that only pressure in the streets could avert what they describe as an attempt by Mr. Putin to sideline his most popular opponent.

Those protests were unfolding across Russia on Saturday, organized in part by Mr. Navalny’s sprawling network of local offices. Local officials did not authorize the protests — citing the coronavirus pandemic, among other things — and they threatened to arrest anyone who took part.

Video showed police officers scuffling with demonstrators in Vladivostok and Khabarovsk, but there were no immediate reports of large-scale violence. OVD-Info, an activist group that tracks arrests at protests, reported 3,134 detentions nationwide as of late evening.

In the usually quiet city of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, a fishing and energy hub on an island north of Japan, hundreds of people joined in Saturday’s protests.

Some schools rescheduled classes, while one put on a basketball tournament to try to keep teenagers away from the protests, said Lyubov Barabashova, a journalist based in the city.

The police did not prevent protesters from gathering in front of the regional government’s headquarters, Ms. Barabashova said. When a police officer announced by megaphone that the rally was illegal, protesters chanted in response: “Putin is a thief! Freedom to Navalny!”

The Kremlin has weathered waves of protest in years past, and there was no immediate indication that this time would be different. There were mounting signals that the government intended to respond to the protests with a new wave of repression.

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Police officers detaining a protester in Moscow.Credit...Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

As night fell in Moscow, videos circulated on social media that showed extraordinary defiance by protesters and violent scuffles between them and the police.

Footage showed protesters pelting a group of riot police officers with snowballs. Chanting “Shame!” protesters also threw snowballs at a passing government car with an official blue light. After it came to a stop, people rushed at the car and started kicking it.

The remarkable acts of defiance showed how protesters on Saturday appeared to be more brazen than Russian demonstrators in years past. Across the country, videos showed protesters scuffling with police officers who rushed at them, swinging batons and kicking them.

The government car that was attacked belonged to the F.S.B., Russia’s domestic intelligence agency, state news media reported later. The driver lost an eye, the RIA state news agency said.

Moscow’s riot police unit was out in force on city streets, but over all the officers appeared more restrained than the security forces who used tear gas, stun grenades and rubber bullets to put down protests in neighboring Belarus last year. Still, there were numerous videos showing vicious beatings by the police in Moscow.

It is not clear whether footage of the violence will turn people away from future protests — or serve to energize the movement.

“If Putin thinks the most frightening things are behind him, he is very sorely and naïvely mistaken,” Leonid Volkov, an aide to Mr. Navalny, said on YouTube as the protests wound down.

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Protesters gathering in St. Petersburg.Credit...Anton Vaganov/Reuters

At regular intervals during his two decades in power, President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia has faced what leaders in most countries would shrug off as inconsequential protests by a few thousand people threatening no more than sporadic traffic disruptions.

But each time, and again on Saturday in cities across Russia, modest challenges from the street have turned into serious spectacles of dissent thanks to the heavy-handed response of the country’s vast and often brutal security apparatus.

In Moscow on Saturday, riot police officers wearing black helmets and swinging batons began grabbing people in Pushkin Square, in the center of the Russian capital, even before the start of a planned protest. They did the same in the summer of 2019 during the last round of protests called by Aleksei A. Navalny.

The deployment of so many police and other security officers, who sometimes outnumber protesters, is a measure of how nervously the Kremlin views all deviations from the portrayal of Mr. Putin on state media outlets as Russia’s divinely ordained and inviolable supreme leader.

The U.S. State Department, just days into the new American administration, condemned the use of harsh tactics against protesters, calling the crackdown and the arrest of the opposition leader Aleksei Navalny “troubling indications of further restrictions on civil society and fundamental freedoms.”

“The United States will stand shoulder-to-shoulder with our allies and partners in defense of human rights,” the State Department said in a statement that urged Russia to release Mr. Navalny and all those detained “for exercising their universal rights.”

The department also called on Russia to cooperate in an international investigation of Mr. Navalny’s poisoning in August.

Russian media have already pushed back against an earlier U.S. statement.

When the U.S. Embassy in Moscow warned American citizens to stay away from Saturday’s protests, a Russian news anchor used the warning to suggest that the United States had in fact organized them.

“This is very important: Information about the place and time of the unsanctioned events planned for tomorrow has appeared on the website of the American Embassy,” the news anchor on Russia’s state-controlled Channel One said. “As they say, draw your own conclusions.”

The Russian authorities said they were starting criminal investigations of protest organizers. And on Friday, the evening news broadcast on Channel One devoted about one-third of the program to Mr. Navalny — a stark departure from the state media’s typical practice of ignoring him.

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President Vladimir V. Putin would almost certainly win an election against Mr. Navalny, but has refused to allow Mr. Navalny’s name on a presidential ballot.Credit...Dimitar Dilkoff/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Opinion polls — of uncertain value in a country saturated by state propaganda and often fearful of speaking out — indicate that President Vladimir Putin faces no grave challenge to his popularity from the opposition leader Aleksei Navalny.

A November survey of opinion by the Levada Center, an independent and highly respected polling organization, found that only 2 percent of respondents named Mr. Navalny as their first choice when asked whom they would choose if a presidential election were to be held the following Sunday. Fifty-five percent named Mr. Putin.

Such polls, however, say less about Mr. Navalny’s popularity than the Kremlin’s success in dulling many people’s minds to even the possibility of an alternative to Mr. Putin, who has been in power for so many years that he has become a seemingly immovable fixture.

Mr. Putin would almost certainly win a head-to-head electoral race against Mr. Navalny but has refused to allow Mr. Navalny’s name on a presidential ballot — or even to utter it in public.

“Who needs him?” Mr. Putin said at a news conference last month.

On the one occasion that Mr. Navalny was allowed on a ballot — for Moscow’s mayoral election in 2013 — he captured 27 percent of the vote and finished second behind a Kremlin loyalist. That result so unnerved the Kremlin that Mr. Navalny was then placed under house arrest on fraud and embezzlement charges that the European Court of Human Rights has dismissed as politically motivated.

While Mr. Navalny appears to have only minority support among the general public, he has been cheered on by many young Russians, who made up the bulk of the crowds in Moscow and elsewhere on Saturday and largely get their news from social media rather than state television.

Surveys show that opposition to Mr. Putin is also strong among professionals and the middle class, particularly in Moscow, and indicate that about one-third of the capital’s residents oppose the government.

Mikhail Dravsky, 60, an accountant who joined the protest in Moscow, said he was not inspired by the opposition leader Aleksei Navalny, but by this moment in his country’s history.

“I don’t support Navalny, but there are no others,” Mr. Dravsky said. “He is the only opposition leader.”

Mr. Dravsky said he didn’t expect much to change as a result of Saturday’s protests, but added that displays of dissent do, at least sometimes, work. He recalled joining protests in 1991 over a coup attempt by hard-line security and military officials against Mikhail Gorbachev, the last Soviet leader.

“I didn’t think it would work then either,” Mr. Dravsky said, “but I would have been ashamed if I didn’t come out.”

Saturday’s protests, which drew thousands of people from Vladivostok on the Pacific Ocean to Moscow, nearly 4,000 miles to the west, fell far short of the mass demonstrations by hundreds of thousands seen last year in Minsk, the capital of neighboring Belarus.

But while posing no immediate challenge to Mr. Putin’s grip on Russia, they raised a defiant cry in favor of an alternative, something that the president and his security apparatus have worked relentlessly to make seem impossible.

“We won’t bear it anymore. We are not afraid,” read a banner hoisted in Pushkin Square.

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Saturday’s protests drew thousands of people, from Vladivostok on the Pacific to Moscow, above, nearly 4,000 miles to the west.Credit...Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

The street protests in Russia are providing an early test of how Twitter’s decision to bar former President Donald J. Trump — and other online crackdowns in America — will echo globally.

The opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny opposed the ban on Mr. Trump, arguing that it set a precedent that played out in Russia as regulators asked social media sites to remove posts promoting Saturday’s protests.

“Of course, during his time in office, Trump has been writing and saying very irresponsible things,” Mr. Navalny posted on Twitter this month, noting that Mr. Trump had “paid for it by not getting re-elected for a second term.”

Social media has been critical in helping government critics in Russia organize demonstrations.

Gathering or marching without a parade permit or calling for participation in such an action is illegal in Russia, and the often-ruthless enforcement of these laws has kept a lid on political opposition for years.

Mr. Navalny has promoted illegal protests for nearly a decade, saying they are justified to encourage political change. He has never called for violent action.

Russia’s telecommunications regulator said it had ordered social networks to take down posts promoting Saturday’s protests, and the country’s top investigative body said it had started a criminal investigation into the alleged incitement of minors to join.

Enforcement has been mixed so far. The regulator said that YouTube, Instagram and the Russian social network VKontakte had begun following an order from the country’s prosecutor-general that they remove “calls for children to participate in illegal mass events.”

But on YouTube, a report that Mr. Navalny prepared accusing President Vladimir V. Putin of building a luxurious palace remained among the top trending videos in Russia, with more than 65 million views. On the social network TikTok, which is popular with young people, a hashtag dedicated to Saturday’s protests remained accessible. Videos tagged with it had been viewed more than 125 million times.

In one popular posting, protesters were encouraged to tell the police that they were American in the hopes it will give the authorities pause.

Facebook said it was not taking down posts. “We’ve received requests from the local regulator to restrict access to certain content that calls for protest,” the company said in a statement. “Since this content doesn’t violate our community standards, it remains on our platform.”

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A rally in Omsk. Arrests were made in more than 100 cities nationwide.Credit...Associated Press

A ninth grader in the Russian city of Yekaterinburg asked his classmates this week why they did not like President Vladimir V. Putin.

According to their teacher, Irina V. Skachkova, they responded by citing the jailed opposition leader Aleksei A. Navalny: “Putin has a palace that was built with stolen money, and Putin is himself a thief.”

Mr. Navalny’s dramatic return to Russia from Germany on Sunday and his immediate arrest, followed by his release of a video documenting Mr. Putin’s purported secret palace on the Black Sea, has captivated many young Russians and prompted the authorities to scramble to keep them away from protests.

Some universities threatened students with expulsion if they were caught attending the protests calling for Mr. Navalny’s release.

The Education Ministry urged families to spend the weekend doing nonpolitical activities like “taking a walk in a park or a forest.”

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British military personnel investigating the poisoning of Sergei V. Skripal in Salisbury, England, in 2018.Credit...Chris J Ratcliffe/Getty Images

Few people had heard of the nerve agent Novichok until 2018, when Western officials accused Russia of having used it in the attempted assassination of a former spy in Britain. It returned to the headlines in September when Germany said the poison had sickened the Russian dissident Aleksei A. Navalny.

But scientists, spies and chemical weapons specialists have known about and feared Novichok for decades. It is a potent neurotoxin, developed in the Soviet Union and Russia in the 1980s and ’90s, that can be delivered as a liquid, powder or aerosol, and is said to be more lethal than nerve agents that are better known in the West, like VX and sarin.

The poison causes muscle spasms that can stop the heart, cause fluid buildup in the lungs that can also be deadly, and damage other organs and nerve cells. Russia has produced several versions of Novichok, and experts say it’s anyone’s guess how often they have been used, because the resulting deaths can appear like nothing more sinister than a heart attack.

That may have been the plan in the case of Sergei V. Skripal, a former Russian spy living in Salisbury, England. When Mr. Skripal was found barely conscious in a park in March 2018, there was no obvious reason to suspect poisoning — except that his daughter, who was visiting, experienced the same symptoms.

British intelligence agencies identified the substance as Novichok and blamed Russia. The attack became a major international scandal, further chilling relations between Moscow and the West. The British identified Russian agents who they said had flown into Britain, applied the poison to the front door handle of Mr. Skripal’s house and left the country, leaving a trail of video and chemical evidence.

President Vladimir V. Putin’s government has consistently denied any involvement, spinning a series of alternative theories. And just months before the Salisbury attack, Mr. Putin said that Russia had destroyed all of its chemical weapons.

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Supporters of Mr. Navalny on Monday outside the police station near Moscow where he was being held.Credit...Sergey Ponomarev for The New York Times

In the days before Saturday’s protests, Aleksei A. Navalny’s team published a sprawling investigation describing a secret palace built for President Vladimir V. Putin on the Black Sea.

Released on Tuesday, less than 24 hours after Mr. Navalny was ordered jailed, the report was the latest swipe in the Russian opposition leader’s dramatic battle with Mr. Putin.

The investigation — complete with floor plans, financial details and interior photographs of a compound that Mr. Navalny says cost more than $1 billion — appeared to offer the most comprehensive accounting yet of a huge residence that the president is said to have built for himself on southern Russia’s verdant seashore.

The Kremlin denied the findings in the report, which went online as a 113-minute YouTube video and an illustrated text version that invited users to post pictures of Mr. Putin’s purported luxury to Facebook and Instagram. The video has been viewed more than 65 million times on YouTube.

“They will keep on stealing more and more, until they bankrupt the entire country,” Mr. Navalny says in the video, referring to Mr. Putin and his circle. “Russia sells huge amounts of oil, gas, metals, fertilizer and timber — but people’s incomes keep falling and falling, because Putin has his palace.”

Ivan Nechepurenko and Richard Pérez-Peña contributed reporting.

Anton Troianovski is the Moscow bureau chief for The New York Times. He was previously Moscow bureau chief of The Washington Post and spent nine years with The Wall Street Journal in Berlin and New York. More about Anton Troianovski

Andrew E. Kramer is a reporter based in the Moscow bureau. He was part of a team that won the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting for a series on Russia’s covert projection of power. More about Andrew E. Kramer

Andrew Higgins is the bureau chief for East and Central Europe based in Warsaw. Previously a correspondent and bureau chief in Moscow for The Times, he was on the team awarded the 2017 Pulitzer Prize in International Reporting, and led a team that won the same prize in 1999 while he was Moscow bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal.  More about Andrew Higgins

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