Mass arrests
The Russian interior ministry said 500 people were detained at the protest in St. Petersburg, where they said 3,500 people turned out. Police in Moscow said 5,000 protested in the capital, and as many as 850 people were reported arrested. Organizers in both cities said the protest turnout was much higher, and as many as 1,000 people were arrested in Moscow alone. Police arrested opposition party leader Alexei Navalny prior to the start of the rally in Moscow. Navalny was later sentenced to 30 days administrative detention for staging an unsanctioned protest. Navalny said on Twitter: “30 days. Not only that they plundered the whole country, so I’ll miss Depeche Mode concert in Moscow because of them.”30 суток. Мало того, что они всю страну разворовали, так я ещё из-за них концерт Depeche Mode в Москве пропущу.
— Alexey Navalny (@navalny) June 12, 2017
Sofia, 22, from Magadan says she owned this rubber duck dress before Medvedev made it cool pic.twitter.com/MiN0CmX0Z4
— max seddon (@maxseddon) June 12, 2017
St Petersburg pic.twitter.com/ADv9vmdDD2
— Jack Stubbs (@jc_stubbs) June 12, 2017
Moscow right now!
— Julian Röpcke (@JulianRoepcke) June 12, 2017
The faster the #Kremlin regime falls the better – for #Russia and the world.#PutinAtWar pic.twitter.com/XSKf9cjok0
Latest updates
This marks out Navalny as a big player. He has learned from the mistakes of his predecessors and is building a nationwide political machine https://t.co/nTFHiZzLki
— Alexander Clarkson (@APHClarkson) June 12, 2017
Hearing that Spanish journalist with @EFEnoticias detained while covering Moscow protest.
— Daniel Schearf (@DanielSSchearf) June 12, 2017
Police beat protesters with batons in Pushkin Square. #RussiaProtests https://t.co/jmsOUlc9a4
— X Soviet 🇺🇦 (@XSovietNews) June 12, 2017