The Downward Spiral of Democracy in Russia

Ikohn4ever

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Kasparov jailed after anti-Putin protest

By MANSUR MIROVALEV, Associated Press Writer Sat Nov 24, 7:52 PM ET

MOSCOW - Russian authorities arrested former world chess champion Garry Kasparov on Saturday and sentenced him to five days in prison after he helped lead a protest against President Vladimir Putin that ended in clashes with police.


Kasparov, one of President Vladimir Putin's harshest critics, was charged with organizing an unsanctioned procession of at least 1,500 people against Putin, chanting anti-government slogans and resisting arrest, court documents said. His assistant said he was beaten during the demonstration.


At the hastily organized trial, two police testified that they had been ordered before the rally to arrest Kasparov.

"What you read is the fruit of a fantasy dictated on orders from above," Kasparov told the court.

The violence came amid an election campaign in which some opposition political groups have been sidelined by new election rules or have complained of being hobbled by official harassment.

The Kremlin has mounted a major campaign to orchestrate a crushing victory for Putin's United Russia party in Dec. 2 parliamentary elections — perhaps to ensure that Putin can continue to rule Russia even after he steps down as president in May. The constitution prevents him from serving three consecutive terms.

The fracas also comes at a time of growing concern in the West over the state of democracy in Russia, with western critics saying freedoms have been curtailed during Putin's eight years in office. Putin accuses the West of meddling in Russian politics.

Kasparov and dozens of other demonstrators were detained after the rally which drew several thousand people.

The opposition activist was forced to the ground and beaten, his assistant Marina Litvinovich said in a telephone interview from outside the police station where Kasparov was held.

"Putin's brakes don't work," Kasparov told a reporter in the courtroom. "I didn't hear any orders from police, unless you count the strike of a police club as an order."

Protesters were surrounded by metal fences and funneled through metal detectors while hundreds of uniformed police and interior ministry troops stood by. Men in black coats who refused to identify themselves circulated through the crowd shooting video.

After the rally ended, a line of helmeted police tried to prevent a march and channel protesters back toward a nearby Metro station.

Among the dozens of demonstrators arrested was Eduard Limonov, author and leader of the National Bolshevik Party, Kasparov's closest partner in a coalition of anti-Kremlin organizations. Supporters said he was later released.

Police in other Russian cities, including Nizhny Novgorod and Samara, detained local opposition protest organizers, according to the Interfax news agency.

Kasparov's coalition, which includes radicals, democrats and Soviet-era dissidents, has drawn wide media coverage but generated little public support.

Its ranks have expanded, though, as more mainstream political parties complain that officials have excluded them from freely contesting the upcoming elections.

On Friday, the Moscow offices of Kasparov's political organization were searched by police, who seized campaign materials, and the headquarters of the opposition Union of Right Forces party was hit by vandals, the groups said.


Police in Moscow and several other cities have used force to break up several so-called Dissenters Marches in the past year, sometimes beating protesters with truncheons.

The city gave organizers a permit for Saturday's rally but forbid them to march.

Meanwhile, an opposition party candidate from Russia's troubled Dagestan region who was shot by unidentified gunmen earlier this week died Saturday of his wounds.

Farid Babayev, a Yabloko party candidate, was shot Wednesday in the entryway to his apartment. His party's leader linked the killing to Babayev's efforts to hold authorities accountable for human rights abuses in Dagestan.

Yabloko party leader Grigory Yavlinsky called Babayev "one more victim of the authoritarian regime of Putin, where the physical destruction of your political opponents has become the norm."





Its sad because Democracy is dying in Russia. We think that Pakistan or Myanmar is having problems, but Russia is a stones throw from returning to its old self. With its rich natural resources they are doing much better than us, and now there is no way we could even try to outspend them to put them out of business. Most people either don't know or don't care, and who is the US to complain about their actions when we are in the presidency of secrets and lies.
 
[quote name='The Crotch']What does that have to do with anything? The United States is not the world's moral measuring stick.[/quote]

Thats true but...in defense of Ikon4ever, He is simpling posting an article about Russia and he obviously felt it was important that we are aware of what's going on.

By the way, I love Kasparov Chess for the GBA..More so than Chessmaster.
 
Sigh. Time to go find the ol' "All Russians are _______" demonizing paintbrush-style hat, so that I can live a naive existence, assured that Democracy is a perfect and foolproof system, except when placed in the hands of evil tyrants and buffoons.

I haven't worn that since the coup attempt on Yeltsin. Hope it fits.
 
[quote name='mykevermin']Sigh. Time to go find the ol' "All Russians are _______" demonizing paintbrush-style hat, so that I can live a naive existence, assured that Democracy is a perfect and foolproof system, except when placed in the hands of evil tyrants and buffoons.

I haven't worn that since the coup attempt on Yeltsin. Hope it fits.[/QUOTE]

This is part of what gets under my skin about our typical dichotomous thinking. The Russians were "bad"; now they're "good" and the Islamo-Facists (*sigh*) are "bad." Of course, they were "good" when the Russians were "bad," and look where that got us. I fully expect us to finally have Iraq/Afghanistan to a point where we can ignore them just in time for us to get blindsided by some nefarious deeds from a newly "bad" Russia. It's like our foreign policy comes out of a comic book, I tells ya...
 
[quote name='pittpizza']Uh ohhh......

Nuclear Missile crisis here we come.[/quote]

I think we should worry more about Pakistan than Russia.
 
Russian Democracy has been weak at best since it came around in the early ninties. I just don't get why the US or any other country in the world didn't do more to help the people of Russia transition from Communism to Democracy...
 
[quote name='t0llenz']Russian Democracy has been weak at best since it came around in the early ninties. I just don't get why the US or any other country in the world didn't do more to help the people of Russia transition from Communism to Democracy...[/QUOTE]

What don't they have in abundance? You'll find your answer there.
 
[quote name='t0llenz']Russian Democracy has been weak at best since it came around in the early ninties. I just don't get why the US or any other country in the world didn't do more to help the people of Russia transition from Communism to Democracy...[/quote]

They didn't have loads of oil yet.
 
[quote name='Xevious']I think we should worry more about Pakistan than Russia.[/QUOTE]

India should worry about Pakistan. Us? Not so much. Of course, I reserve the right to change my mind on that as soon as Musharref is out and the new guys who might very well hate us for supporting Musharref are in.
 
[quote name='mykevermin']What don't they have in abundance? You'll find your answer there.[/QUOTE]


I don't get your meaning.
 
It shouldn't have been about oil. It should have been about the fact that one of the largest, landmass wise, nations of the world with a ton of nuclear capabilities should have had some help to transition to Democracy so that in, oh, less than 20 years it doesn't fall so quickly into the trap of a totalitarian government led by a former KGB agent...
 
bread's done
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