Photo: Taisia Antonova, MosNews.com
Two Yabloko activists, a man and a woman, have been hospitalized - one in
severe condition - after being beaten by FSB agents who detained them
at an unauthorized rally in front of the FSB building, Yabloko spokesman
Sergei Kozakov told MosNews.
Alexei Kozhin, 19, is reportedly in serious condition after
he was beaten by senior lieutenant of the FSB Dmitri Streltsov during
an interrogation that followed his detention, Kazakov said in a statement.
He quoted the party's deputy chairman, Alexei Navalny,
as saying that the party would complain to the prosecutor's office about
the beatings.
At least nine people were detained Tuesday after a demonstration by
the
liberal Yabloko party's youth organization in front of the FSB building
in
central Moscow turned violent, a correspondent at the scene of the incident
told MosNews.
Yabloko has said that special police forces were used to round up the
activists, but a MosNews correspondent said she saw passersby holding
some
of the activists on the orders of policemen patrolling the area. Traffic
police and private security guards also helped detain the activists. She
said she saw one young man being beaten by at least four policemen.
About 20 young party representatives had marched up to the FSB building
on Lubyanka Square around noon on Tuesday and began throwing red paint
balls and eggs at the building and at the memorial plaque to former Soviet
leader Yuri Andropov, Kazakov told MosNews.
Apart from party activists, the nine people detained included journalists
from NTV television, the independent Ekho Moskvy radio station, and the
independent Nezavisimaya Gazeta newspaper, Kazakov told MosNews.
The activists held up banners reading "Down with Big Brother!"
and "Down
with a Police State," as well as other slogans criticizing the regime
of
President Vladimir Putin, Kazakov said in a statement.
The young Yabloko activists, in a statement to MosNews, compared Putin's
regime to that of other Russian dictators like Josef Stalin and Tsar
Nicholas I
See also:
Human
Rights
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