THE KREMLIN |
by:
Ellen Barry,
The New York Times News Service | Report
The New York Times News Service | Report
Moscow - Tens of thousands of protesters gathered here on Saturday afternoon for a second large antigovernment demonstration, as a wave of new activists struggle to convert an inchoate burst of energy into a durable political force.
Organizers hope to build on the success of the Dec. 10 protests, which mobilized a broad collection of previously apolitical middle-class Russians angry over parliamentary elections earlier this month that many rejected as fraudulent and slanted in favor of the ruling party, United Russia. If the movement can sustain its intensity, it could alter the course of presidential elections in March, when Vladimir V. Putin plans to extend his status as the country’s dominant figure to 18 years.
The crowd began forming more than an hour before the beginning of the
protest, for which city authorities granted a permit for up to 50,000
people. Organizers estimated the crowd at 120,000; the police offered a
lower estimate of about 29,000. READ MORE
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Just keep it civil.