Posted on Mar 1, 2022
Russian anti-war protesters take to the streets at home and abroad
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Russia is clearly the aggressor in Ukraine, with vast military might being brought to bear against its neighbors. But that doesn't mean that the Russian people are in unanimous support of President Vladimir Putin's actions.
An independent Russian human rights group estimates that the police have already detained at least 6,000 anti-war protestors in more than 50 cities.
Andrew Roth, The Guardian's Moscow correspondent, joins us.
An independent Russian human rights group estimates that the police have already detained at least 6,000 anti-war protestors in more than 50 cities.
Andrew Roth, The Guardian's Moscow correspondent, joins us.
Russian anti-war protesters take to the streets at home and abroad
Posted from wbur.org
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 1
Posted >1 y ago
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
"MOSCOW -- As Russian troops were closing in on the Ukrainian capital, more and more Russians spoke out Saturday against the invasion, even as the government's official rhetoric grew increasingly harsher.
Street protests, albeit small, resumed in the Russian capital of Moscow, the second-largest city of St. Petersburg and other Russian cities for the third straight day, with people taking to the streets despite mass detentions on Thursday and Friday. According to OVD-Info, rights group that tracks political arrests, at least 460 people in 34 cities were detained over anti-war protests on Saturday, including over 200 in Moscow.
Open letters condemning Russia's invasion of Ukraine kept pouring, too. More than 6,000 medical workers put their names under one on Saturday; over 3,400 architects and engineers endorsed another while 500 teachers signed a third one. Similar letters by journalists, municipal council members, cultural figures and other professional groups have been making the rounds since Thursday.
A prominent contemporary art museum in Moscow called Garage announced Saturday it was halting its work on exhibitions and postponing them "until the human and political tragedy that is unfolding in Ukraine has ceased."...
"MOSCOW -- As Russian troops were closing in on the Ukrainian capital, more and more Russians spoke out Saturday against the invasion, even as the government's official rhetoric grew increasingly harsher.
Street protests, albeit small, resumed in the Russian capital of Moscow, the second-largest city of St. Petersburg and other Russian cities for the third straight day, with people taking to the streets despite mass detentions on Thursday and Friday. According to OVD-Info, rights group that tracks political arrests, at least 460 people in 34 cities were detained over anti-war protests on Saturday, including over 200 in Moscow.
Open letters condemning Russia's invasion of Ukraine kept pouring, too. More than 6,000 medical workers put their names under one on Saturday; over 3,400 architects and engineers endorsed another while 500 teachers signed a third one. Similar letters by journalists, municipal council members, cultural figures and other professional groups have been making the rounds since Thursday.
A prominent contemporary art museum in Moscow called Garage announced Saturday it was halting its work on exhibitions and postponing them "until the human and political tragedy that is unfolding in Ukraine has ceased."...
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