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Moscow set for new opposition rally

Monday, 9 January 2012


MOSCOW, Jan 8, 2012 (AFP) - Russians frustrated with both Vladimir Putin and the nascent opposition movement's inability to institute change were to stage a small protest in central Moscow on Sunday.
The unusual counter-demonstration reflects deep fissures among groups opposed to Putin's 12-year domination of Russia and his expected return to the Kremlin in March presidential polls. Organisers said the 2:00 pm (1000 GMT) rally on Bolotnaya Square-scene of a historic protest against the outcome of a disputed December 4 parliamentary vote-was sanctioned by the city and expected to draw around 300 people.
"We have had enough of both this leadership and this opposition in equal measure," organisers said in a statement posted on the mitingvmoskve.ru website.
Moscow last month was rocked by the biggest rallies since the turbulent 1990s when tens of thousands turned out against elections in which Putin's ruling party retained a narrow majority amid allegations of fraud.
A third such mass event has been scheduled for February 4 -- exactly a month before a presidential vote in which Putin hopes to win a third term after serving as head of state from 2000 to 2008.
Putin agreed to hand his current premiership post to President Dmitry Medvedev after the elections in a role swap that has sparked deep resentment among voters who feel cheated by the private deal.