UpdateKremlin crackdown: opposition politician Alexei Navalny arrested in wave of detentions during protests
Several thousand protesters, including many young people, crowded central Moscow at Navalny’s behest chanting “Russia without Putin” and “Russia will be free”

Baton-wielding riot police broke up an anti-government demonstration in Moscow on Monday and arrested scores of protesters after detaining Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny as he tried to leave his home.
Several thousand protesters, including many young people, crowded central Moscow at Navalny’s behest chanting “Russia without Putin” and “Russia will be free”.
Navalny, who is mounting a long-shot bid to unseat Putin in a presidential election next year, had called for mass protests in Moscow and other cities against what he says is a corrupt system of rule overseen by Russian President Vladimir Putin.
The Kremlin has repeatedly dismissed those allegations and accused Navalny of trying irresponsibly to whip up unrest.
“Corruption is stealing our future,” read one placard next to an image of a yellow duck, a reference to a duck house which Navalny said Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev owned on a vast country estate, an allegation Medvedev says is “nonsense”.
