RA’s Daily Russia News Blast – May 17, 2012
TODAY: Art exhibitions stormed by orthodox activists; Yashin and dozens more arrested at new Moscow protest site; change in mood noted. Sergei Magnitsky sanctions; teacher faces trial over claims she was pushed into voting for Putin; spacecraft reaches ISS; black box from Sukhoi Superjet tragedy found
The opening of two modern art exhibitions curated by Marat Guelman have apparently been besieged by scores of radical traditionalists led by an Orthodox Christian priest who believe the works shown to be blasphemous, despite high-ranking Orthodox official Vsevolod Chaplin seeing ‘nothing unholy’ in the exhibits. Police in Moscow have detained opposition leader Ilya Yashin and at least 16 other anti-Putin activists as they continue their marathon protest on Kudrinskaya Square following their ejection from the ‘Occupy Abay’ Chistye Prudi site. It has also been reported that around 1,500 opposition supporters have gathered in the Barrikadnaya station area. Opposition activist Aleksei Sakyerto has told RFE/RL that police were rough when removing protestors from Kudrinskaya Square. ‘What had been a mood inclined toward peaceful action turned to bitterness and anger’, says the Washington Post. Ilya Yashin has called the Occupy Abay camp ‘a big victory, because it forced authorities to behave decently, observe rules, even turn to the court for a decision to remove it’. This columnist argues that the value of the Occupy movement is limited as long as Russia’s regions are uninspired. Bloomberg wonders whether Sunday’s test stroll, ‘was a spectacular success or a baffling failure’. Ria-Novosti reports on a new legislative weapon against the protest movement.