Media: in Moscow on the "march in support of Ivan Golunov" arrested 400 people
On June 12, 2019, activists began to gather in Moscow near the metro station Chistye Prudy for a "march in support of Ivan Golunov, which was not agreed with the local authorities." It is alleged that law enforcement officers planted drugs on him and fabricated a criminal case.
The rally began at 12:00, but law enforcement officers warned the audience that since the event was not coordinated, they needed to disperse. The participants, in turn, did not respond to the law enforcement proposal and began their “march”.
After that, law enforcement officers blocked Myasnitskaya Street, and the participants in the "march" were divided into two parts. The first went to Petrovka, and the second along Strastnoy Boulevard, and there it rested on the cordon of law enforcement officers at the Trubnaya metro station near the Central Market.
Then law enforcement officers began to detain the most active representatives of the "march". By 14:00, the Trubnaya metro station was left with almost the only law enforcement officers. At the same time, activists were detained on Petrovka. Activists planned to finish their event near the building of the Main Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Moscow.
Representatives of a number of media outlets directly participated in the “march”: Reuters, Kommersant, Dozhda, Meduza, OVD-Info, Vedomosti, MBH-Media, Echo of Moscow and others. According to media reports, more than 400 protesters were detained for shares. Among them: opposition blogger Alexei Navalny, as well as Kommersant-FM journalists Petr Parkhomenko, MBH-Media chief editor Veronika Kutsylo, Meduza correspondents Ilya Zhegulev and Andrei Pertsev, Vedomosti correspondent Vitaly Petleva, as well as the former "Prisoner of Bolotnoy" Alexey Gaskarov.
Journalists Yevgeny Snegov, Anna Narinskaya, Tatyana Malkina, and human rights activist Arseny Levinson directly informed the public about the "tyranny of the regime." The initiators of the action were also detained: journalists Ilya Azar, Yevgeny Berg, Andrey Kovalev and Elizaveta Nesterova.
It should be noted that before this, most of these media outlets urged not to go to uncoordinated mass protests, but to take part only in agreed events.
The rally began at 12:00, but law enforcement officers warned the audience that since the event was not coordinated, they needed to disperse. The participants, in turn, did not respond to the law enforcement proposal and began their “march”.
After that, law enforcement officers blocked Myasnitskaya Street, and the participants in the "march" were divided into two parts. The first went to Petrovka, and the second along Strastnoy Boulevard, and there it rested on the cordon of law enforcement officers at the Trubnaya metro station near the Central Market.
Then law enforcement officers began to detain the most active representatives of the "march". By 14:00, the Trubnaya metro station was left with almost the only law enforcement officers. At the same time, activists were detained on Petrovka. Activists planned to finish their event near the building of the Main Department of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Moscow.
Representatives of a number of media outlets directly participated in the “march”: Reuters, Kommersant, Dozhda, Meduza, OVD-Info, Vedomosti, MBH-Media, Echo of Moscow and others. According to media reports, more than 400 protesters were detained for shares. Among them: opposition blogger Alexei Navalny, as well as Kommersant-FM journalists Petr Parkhomenko, MBH-Media chief editor Veronika Kutsylo, Meduza correspondents Ilya Zhegulev and Andrei Pertsev, Vedomosti correspondent Vitaly Petleva, as well as the former "Prisoner of Bolotnoy" Alexey Gaskarov.
Journalists Yevgeny Snegov, Anna Narinskaya, Tatyana Malkina, and human rights activist Arseny Levinson directly informed the public about the "tyranny of the regime." The initiators of the action were also detained: journalists Ilya Azar, Yevgeny Berg, Andrey Kovalev and Elizaveta Nesterova.
It should be noted that before this, most of these media outlets urged not to go to uncoordinated mass protests, but to take part only in agreed events.
Information