A total of a hundred people were arrested during several rallies in Russia in memory of opponent Alexeï Navalny, who died in prison on Friday, the specialized NGO OVD-Info announced on Saturday.
According to the count published on its site and updated Saturday morning, “more than 101 people were arrested in ten cities”, mainly large urban centers.
Around sixty people were arrested and detained in Saint Petersburg, around fifteen in Nijni Novgorod and around ten in Moscow.
As of Friday afternoon, the capital’s authorities had warned residents against any “unauthorized” demonstrations, after the announcement of the death of the Kremlin’s number one opponent.
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But in the evening, in several Russian cities, people were queuing to lay flowers on monuments in memory of political dissidents, even though arrests had already been reported.
In Russia, any public criticism of power is punishable by prison.
Alexei Navalny, 47, was serving a 19-year prison sentence for “extremism” in a remote Arctic colony, in very difficult conditions.
His disappearance after three years of detention and a poisoning for which he accused the Kremlin deprives an already bloodless opposition of its figurehead, one month before the presidential election which should once again cement the power of Vladimir Putin.