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Hundreds protest against Russian government

Last Updated : 03 May 2018, 05:01 IST
Last Updated : 03 May 2018, 05:01 IST

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Several opposition activists were detained. A third rally with nationalist overtones drew more than 1,000 students in the southern city of Rostov-on-Don, raising fears that long-standing ethnic tensions were reaching a boiling point.

The rallies followed violent clashes Saturday just outside the Kremlin walls between riot police and about 5,000 football fans and nationalists, who shouted "Russia for Russians." Police said 34 people were injured; six of them were still hospitalised yesterday.

All 65 people detained during the clashes have been released. The police crackdown further angered Slavic Russians who resent the growing presence of dark-complexioned people from Russia's predominantly Muslim republics in the Caucasus.

Dozens of nationalists picketed yesterday at the Federal Security Service headquarters to protest what they described as discrimination against Russians in favour of ethnic minorities.

"Today, all the (democratic) instruments have been trampled upon by the authorities, which means, if they don't want to use a civilised language, they will have to face, whether they want to or not, the Spartak (football club) rebellion, the crowds," said Vladlen Kralin, a nationalist leader who goes by the name Vladimir Tor.

Saturday's clash grew out of a rally held elsewhere in the city to protest the death last week of Yegor Svidorov, a member of the Spartak team's fan organisation, who was shot with rubber bullets in a fight at a bus stop. Those suspected of killing him are from the Caucasus.

The demonstration appeared to have inspired students in Rostov-on-Don, where 18-year-old Maxim Sychyov died last month after being beaten up by fellow university students from the nearby Caucasus.

More than 1,000 students gathered at his dormitory yesterday to light candles in his memory and then marched along the central avenue shouting "Go, Russians" and
"Russians are united." They called on university and city authorities to clamp down on students from the Caucasus.

The students, who were accompanied by police and Cossacks, dispersed peacefully.

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Published 13 December 2010, 01:55 IST

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