{"id":65821,"date":"2021-02-13T15:54:58","date_gmt":"2021-02-13T15:54:58","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/litci.org\/en\/?p=65821"},"modified":"2021-02-13T15:54:58","modified_gmt":"2021-02-13T15:54:58","slug":"the-meaning-of-the-current-demonstrations-against-putin","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/litci.org\/en\/the-meaning-of-the-current-demonstrations-against-putin\/","title":{"rendered":"The meaning of the current demonstrations against Putin"},"content":{"rendered":"<p lang=\"en-US\"><i>Russia is engulfed in new demonstrations against Vladimir Putin\u2019<\/i><i>s<\/i><i> government. Demonstrations with a democratic content, against the arrest of an opposition leader, Alexey Navalny and against corruption. The fact that they have spread to the interior of the country, to less privileged regions than the capital Moscow, reflects elements of deep social dissatisfaction accumulated over the years in broad sectors. And possibly, in a still embryonic way, elements of crisis in the political regime.<\/i><br \/>\nBy: POI &#8211; Russia<br \/>\n<b>Background<\/b><br \/>\nAlexey Navalny is the organiser of the Anti-Corruption Fund. A kind of NGO that carries out investigations into corruption in the upper echelons of the state. For several years he has been denouncing a series of scandals.<br \/>\nIn the middle of last year, Navalny was poisoned with the toxic agent Novichok, a chemical weapon developed by the ex-USSR\/Russia. It is perhaps the most potent neurological agent in the world. Navalny was transferred in a coma to a German hospital and survived the attack. A journalistic investigation carried out jointly by <i>The Insider<\/i>, <i>Bellingcat<\/i>, CNN and <i>Der Spiegel<\/i> showed that 8 agents of the FSB (Federal Security Service, the Russian secret service, formerly KGB) had flown with him to the city where he was poisoned, following exactly the same route. All 8 agents had a background in chemistry or medicine. The investigation also showed that before the attack they had called several times the research centre that developed Novichok and, as soon as it was clear that the attack had failed and that Navalny had survived, they called the same research centre again. It was also proven that these same agents had been tracking Navalny&#8217;s travels over the past three years, with suspicions of other attempts to poison Navalny and his wife and of murdering other oppositionists or journalists.<br \/>\nThe most spectacular twist was that Navalny called one of these agents, playing his superior, in which he confirmed his participation in the failed poisoning attempt, in a video that went viral in Russia. The use of Novichok could not be authorised without the approval of the FSB director, who in turn could not act in such a way without Putin&#8217;s approval. In other words, everything indicates that Putin is the mastermind of the crime. The Putin government, of course, denies any accusation and has even refused to open an investigation into the case, simply denying the poisoning. The German hospital which treated Navalny has confirmed it, as have laboratories in Germany, Sweden and France. Even the Russian hospital that treated Navalny before he was sent to Germany cited poisoning by a neurological agent in a statement, but soon it was withdrawn.<br \/>\nThe journalistic investigation of the poisoning, as well as the video of the telephone conversation with the FSB agent who admitted the poisoning, were followed by millions of people in Russia. Soon after, Navalny published the results of a major investigation into a bribery scheme for the construction of a luxurious palace for Putin on the shores of the Black Sea, built by big contractor companies owned by Russian oligarchs. The investigation was presented in a two-hour video, which has had more than 100 million views in a country of 140 million people. The Palace, treated as &#8220;the world\u2019s largest bribe,&#8221; draws attention for its ostentatious luxury, sofas worth almost $100,000, water disco, striptease lanes, theatre, cinema, underground hockey rink, wine cellars, room for sanitising eggs (!) or $1,000 toilet brushes, which eventually became one of the symbols of the protests. Putin had to go public to deny that the palace is his, despite the fact that its construction was coordinated by the Presidential Administration apparatus and that the companies that participated in its construction referred to it as &#8220;the president&#8217;s palace.&#8221;<br \/>\nUpon returning to Russia, Navalny was immediately arrested at the airport, even before passing passport control. He was charged with breaking the conditions of his sentence to house arrest, <b>while in a coma or under treatment in <\/b><b>G<\/b><b>ermany<\/b>. Since then he has been in prison. His previous conviction is obscure, Navalny claims it was fabricated to prevent him from participating in past presidential elections.<\/p>\n<p><span lang=\"en-US\"><b>Navalny&#8217;s arrest sets off <\/b><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><b>a <\/b><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><b>wave of demonstrations across the country<\/b><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><br \/>\nA demonstration demanding the release of Navalny and all political prisoners was held on Saturday 23 January. It was preceded by much discussion on social media, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">mainly on TikTok, an app popular with student youth. This fact drew the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">attention of state security bodies. <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">So, t<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">he Ministry of Education organised a campaign, where teachers in schools explain<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ed to the<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> students it was not right to take part in demonstrations against our beloved president, as well as writing to parents to keep their children at home. The media constantly reported that the demonstration was illegal and that it would be harshly repressed. <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">They <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">said <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">it was <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">a provocation by the American secret services.<br \/>\n<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">The<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> campaign of misinformation and fear <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">didn\u2019t stop tens of thousands of <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">demonstrat<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ors<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> in 140 cities. In Moscow, about 15-20 thousand people <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">went to the biggest demonstration<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">. The repression was <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">harsh<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, more than 1,500 p<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">rotesters<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">were <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">arrested in Moscow, and thousands more in other regions. Another demonstration was called for <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">Sunday, the<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> 31<\/span><sup><span lang=\"en-US\">st<\/span><\/sup><span lang=\"en-US\">. This time on Lubyanka Square, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">Moscow,<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">outside<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">FSB <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">central headquarters, an unacceptable audacity for the government. <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">It<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> closed the city centre with police cordons, OMON shock troops, 10 <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">subway<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> stations were closed, all access to the city centre was interrupted, buses and cars were prevented from reaching the centre. The city centre was <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">actually put<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> in a state of siege, something unheard of in the capital. But this did not discourage the demonstrators, who organised columns of a few hundred to a few thousand <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">people<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> that kept moving around the city, bypassing the police cordon, being dispersed by the police and then reuniting later. This lasted for many hours and in fact kept the city centre and all transport closed and was an event of great repercussion. Again, the struggle spread to many <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">cities<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> in the interior. The repression was even greater than on the 23<\/span><sup><span lang=\"en-US\">rd<\/span><\/sup><span lang=\"en-US\">. On Tuesday, February 2, a new demonstration took place, this time <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">outside<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">C<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ourt where Navalny was to be tried. The slogans most heard in the demonstrations were: <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">Release<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> Navalny! Freedom for all political prisoners! Putin, thief! Down with the Tzar! For a Russia without Putin! Again, the OMON riot police closed down the centre of Moscow and <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">the demonstration was <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">massively repressed.<\/span><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\"><b>The regime reacts harshly<\/b><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><br \/>\n<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">M<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ore than 10,000 activists (including <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">high-school<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> students) were arrested during three days of struggle. The detention centres were crowded, without conditions to receive so many detainees, who had to sleep in overcrowded cells, without beds, mattresses, blankets or even heating. Often without access to the bathroom for long hours and even without water. Many had to spend the night locked in police vans. There were riots, protests and hunger strikes inside the detention centres, usually meant for illegal immigrants. In the end, Navalny was sentenced to about three years in prison.<br \/>\nPutin tries to use massive repression against anyone who opposes his regime, just as his puppet Lukashenko in Belarus has been doing for several months against the huge revolutionary wave there. This is the essence of Putin&#8217;s ultra-reactionary regime, based on the FSB, OMON and the armed forces, absolutely incompatible with democratic <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">right<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">s. While Putin still retained p<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">eople\u2019s<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> support, he could cover himself with a democratic mask. The most important fact of reality in Russia today is that possibly this mask has fallen. Putin is already seen, at least by a considerable portion, as autocratic, repressive, anti-democratic, corrupt and <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">complicit<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">with<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> Russian oligarchs. Even by official polls, which do not deserve the slightest credibility, the government&#8217;s popularity is falling, and popular dissatisfaction is rising.<br \/>\n<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><b>It is not only for Navalny but against <\/b><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><b>poverty<\/b><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><b>, unemployment, and social crisis<\/b><\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"><br \/>\nIt is too early to assess the full importance of th<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ese<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> struggles. But it is clear that it is no longer a movement restricted to Navalny&#8217;s supporters. Many people took to the streets not because they agree with Navalny or with his proposals but against the imprisonment of those who disagree with the government&#8217;s discourse and those who have the courage to denounce it. Navalny in this sense plays the role of <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">triggering<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> a profound process that has been building up for some time in broad layers. In the many interviews carried out in the streets, people justified their participation by being fed up with corruption, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">high<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> prices and <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">low wages<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, layoffs, lack of policy for those affected by the pandemic, lack of vaccines in the country<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">side<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> where the queues last for weeks, while in Moscow they advertise that there are vaccines left over, vaccinating people without queues in the city&#8217;s malls. And many <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">highlighted <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">that they were not supporters of Navalny but <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">w<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ere against his arrest.<br \/>\nIn a country the size of Russia, a few tens of thousands of protesters may not seem a ma<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">jor event<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> to an outsider. But those who were there felt the energy, the degree of mobilisation, combativeness and self-initiative, they realised that <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">it was not<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> &#8220;more of the same.&#8221; The differential of this process of struggles in relation to the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">2012 <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">demonstrations is that it spread to all regions, being proportionally stronger in the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">inner <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">cities than in the privileged and traditionally opposition<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ist<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> Moscow. It also differs from 2012 in that the demonstrations now enjoy massive, but still dispersed, support in broad sectors of the population. In cities where demonstrations were attended by 500 protesters, for example, their videos were followed online by tens of thousands, and nationwide by millions. Even those who did not take to the streets, for fear of harsh repression, followed the events with great interest. There are signs of sympathy in the working class. The social composition of the demonstrations seemed more plebeian than the previous ones, half of the participants answered, in <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">surveys<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> carried out on the spot, that they were taking part in a demonstration for the first time in their lives. In the crowd, there were many women and many young people. The majority age group was between 20 and 45 years old.<\/span><br \/>\n<b><span lang=\"en-US\">Stalinism\u2019<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">s role<\/span><\/b><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">Just as Putin&#8217;s mask is falling, so is the mask of the official &#8220;opposition,&#8221; which condemned Navalny for his &#8220;anti-state&#8221; activity. <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">This is what the CPRF<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> (Communist Party of the Russian Federation) leadership, well known for its pro-Putin stance, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">said<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, which generated elements of crisis in its own apparatus, with some local organisations <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">of<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">inner<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> cities taking part in the demonstrations, publicly against their leadership. This, in turn, called into question Navalny&#8217;s own main political tactic, the so-called &#8220;<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">smart voting<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">,&#8221; <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">a kind of tactical voting intended to consolidate the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">vote<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">s of <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">the best placed &#8220;opposition&#8221; candidate in each region, whoever <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">they are<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, against the candidates of Putin&#8217;s party. Thus, Navalny\u2019<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">s<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">support<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> helped to elect many <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">representatives f<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">rom the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">CPRF<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> and other parties like the Liberal Democrats and Fair Russia, who now approve of Navalny&#8217;s arrest and stand in solidarity with Putin. As we had been criticising for some time, a &#8220;smart <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">voting<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">&#8221; not <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">that<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> smart&#8230;<\/span><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">It is no accident that the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">CPRF<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> (and Stalinists <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">all over <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">the world) defend Putin. The mixture of Russian chauvinism, the exaltation of the &#8220;Soviet empire&#8221; and even of the figure of Stalin, as a symbol of supposed patriotism and strong will, with an anti-western <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">speech<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> (while <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">actually<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> opening the entire economy of the country to European and American capital) suits the Stalinists very well. As a macabre corollary, we cite the fact that in the court that <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">condemned<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> Navalny there was a portrait of Yagoda on the wall, the head of the NKVD (KGB) who, together with Stalin, engineered the first Moscow Trial (that of Zinoviev and Kamenev) against the Bolshevik leaders who were then confronting Stalinism. Not by chance, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">we could see banners saying<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> &#8220;We do not want to go back to 1937,&#8221; the year of the Stalinist Great Terror, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">at the demonstrations<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">.<\/span><br \/>\n<b><span lang=\"en-US\">The international scope of the struggle<\/span><\/b><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">The protests in Russia are still of great importance because they take place in the aftermath of the recent revolutions in Belarus and Kyrgyzstan. It is too early to <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">forecast<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> that these scenarios will be repeated in the short term in Russia, but the processes are fed back, with many demonstrators in Russia carrying the white\/red\/white flag, the symbol of the Belarus<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ian<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> revolution, and with <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">a<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> wave of sympathy for the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">Russian <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">demonstrat<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ors in Belarus<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">.<\/span><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">The Putin regime fulfils the role of a bastion of counter-revolution in the region, having drowned the Syrian revolution in blood and invaded Ukraine, putting it into a <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">civil <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">war, as well as having annexed Crimea, in a policy to defeat <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">its<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> 2014 revolution. It has put troops on standby to support the Lukashenko dictatorship in Belarus, as well as supporting it financially and logistically against the Belarusian revolution. It supports <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">and sends <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">weapons <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">to<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> the Egyptian dictatorship which is <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">a <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">brutally repressi<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ve regime<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, also drowning in blood the revolution that <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">sparked<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> a decade ago. It violently represses all the processes of the struggle <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">for<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> independence in the Caucasus region. It supports all the dictatorships in the former Soviet republics, in Europe, in the Caucasus and in Central Asia. It supports everything that is worst in the world, like the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">far-<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">right European parties. The current struggle against <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">the<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> regime weakens <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">its<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> reactionary role in all these <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">spheres<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">. <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">The<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> defeat of Putin would have great repercussions from the point of view of the class struggle in Eastern Europe, Central Asia, the Caucasus and the Middle East.<\/span><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">In addition to internal problems, Putin now has to deal with the risk of a new wave of sanctions by the European and American governments, that are demanding the release of Navalny and other political prisoners and an end to the repression of demonstrations. So far, these governments have not gone beyond threats, because it is no secret that the so-called Western democracies are more interested in their good business<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">es<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> with Putin&#8217;s regime (and Lukashenko&#8217;s) than in real democratic <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">right<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">s. Nothing could be more hypocritical than the position of Angela Merkel, who, under pressure from public opinion, stands up for the release of the political prisoners but refuses to stop the Nord Stream 2 project (a <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">natural gas<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> pipeline <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">running from <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">Russia to Germany <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">under the Baltic sea, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">without crossing Ukraine), a measure that would have a heavy persuasive effect on Putin and the Russian bourgeoisie. This makes it all the more important to hold demonstrations across Europe for the immediate release of all political prisoners and an end to repression, demanding tough action<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">s<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> against Putin from <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">European<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> governments.<\/span><br \/>\n<b><span lang=\"en-US\">Who is Alexey Navalny?<\/span><\/b><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">Navalny has become, in a sense, the face of the opposition to the Putin regime, not to be confused with the fake &#8220;<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">accepted <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">opposition&#8221; which is part of the Putin regime, which may criticise Putin in retail but supports him in wholesale. Navalny faces with courage and defiance, taking risks, a harsh, oppressive, violent regime which will stop at nothing to silence its opponents. With his articles, investigations, denunciations and videos he inspires hundreds of thousands of people to fight Putin&#8217;s autocracy. In this sense, he deserves our respect and solidarity. But what is needed in Russia is not to replace one &#8220;charismatic leader&#8221; with another. One cannot close one&#8217;s eyes to Navalny&#8217;s political trajectory, his class character and his clear limitations.<\/span><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">Navalny comes from a right-wing populist trajectory, having started his career in a liberal opposition party, the Yabloko, from which he was expelled for his flirtations with xenophobic nationalism, against immigrants, having even taken part in the xenophobic &#8220;Russian March.&#8221; After th<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">at<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, Navalny <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">a<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> more &#8220;sympathetic&#8221; <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">behaviour <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">over the years, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">exposing<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">poverty<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> in the country<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">side<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, defending social policies, and even against <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">the pensions <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">reform, flirting with leftist <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">stances<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">. He has not lost his right-wing nationalist streak, which is explicit in the fact that he has never opposed the annexation of Crimea. He defends a bourgeois liberal and privatis<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ing<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> programme for the Russian economy, besides maintaining important relations with Western powers <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">that, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">it is no coincidence, defend him. It is striking that in all his years of denouncing corruption in the upper echelons of the government, he has never denounced the role of European and American multinationals in this corruption. In economic <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">issues<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, he is no different from Putin.<\/span><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">But none of this changes the fact that the centre of Navalny&#8217;s activity today is <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">exposing<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> the Putin regime and fighting it. And truth be told, quite courageously, which is why he was poisoned and is in prison. In this sense, every worker, every citizen defending democratic <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">right<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">s, every political movement not committed to Putin&#8217;s repressive, corrupt and oligarchic regime, regardless of how they view the political figure of Navalny, must demand his release and of all political prisoners.<\/span><br \/>\n<b><span lang=\"en-US\">Next steps<\/span><\/b><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">It is not easy to determine the next steps in this struggle. The recent Belarusian experience shows that demonstrations every weekend may not be enough to defeat such a tough regime, based on the forces of repression, secret services and the armed forces. In Russia, this task is made even more difficult because Putin, with his xenophobic, chauvinistic and nationalist <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">speech<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, still maintains relative popular support, unlike Lukashenko. Moreover, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">this kind of <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">demonstrations can be an easy target for repression. We repeat, 10,000 demonstrators were arrested in 10 days. Alternatives do need to be considered. But unfortunately, as we were closing this article, Navalny&#8217;s HQ was deciding on a policy that in our opinion <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">i<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">s disastrous. They have postponed all the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">rallies<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> and demonstrations until spring-summer to concentrate on preparing for the September elections to the State Duma, wh<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">en<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, once again, they will use the tactic of &#8220;<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">smart voting,<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">&#8221; that is, to call <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">the<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> vote for any <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">party<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> that claims to be opposition, wh<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ile<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> the majority of these forces support the arrest of Navalny and sustain the Putin regime, even if occasional<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ly<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> criticis<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">ing him<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">&#8230;<\/span><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">It is a mistaken policy, which makes the movement hostage to elections inside Putin&#8217;s regime, that is, controlled by him. If in Belarus the <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">electoral<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> victory of the opposition candidate Tikhanovskaya, failed to get Lukashenko out of power, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">it\u2019s <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">much more <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">probable it<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> will <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">fail<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> in Russia. We call on Navalny&#8217;s HQ to abandon this policy of &#8220;<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">smart voting,<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">&#8221; the uselessness of which reality itself has shown. Enough of nurturing illusions that the FSB regime can &#8220;renew&#8221; itself and hand over power democratically <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">via<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> elections. On the contrary, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">we call <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">Navalniy&#8217;s HQ to say clearly that the FSB and OMON must be dissolved, because they are machinery<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> for repressing any dissent, for political repression, something that should not exist in a democratic Russia. They are bodies which have nothing in common with &#8220;the defence of citizens.&#8221; One should take in this respect the example of the Ukrainian Revolution, which dissolved the political police, the Berkut.<\/span><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">As the best example of the Belarusian Revolution &#8211; the entrance of the working class into the process of struggle which, at least for a period, converted the factories of the country into the main bastion of the struggle against the regime &#8211; should be taken. The working class as such is still absent from the Russian political scene, fragmented, with a strong presence of immigrants without rights from different countries, despite signs of dissatisfaction and sympathy with the current movement. To attract them, social demands must be incorporated, concerning famine, unemployment, wages, pensions, public health, rights for immigrants. We call on Navaln<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">y\u2019s<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> HQ to take up these banners and propagandi<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">s<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">e them among the working class, native and immigrant. These social issues must be linked to the questions of corruption and repression of the regime, in a great campaign to win over wider sectors of the population to oppos<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">e<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> Putin. And <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">so<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">if<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> conditions <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">are favourable<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, demonstrations should be built, as large as possible, with a timetable for starting and ending, to at least reduce the number of <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">arrested<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, since the majority of the arrests take place at the end of the demonstrations when a good number have already left.<\/span><br \/>\n<span lang=\"en-US\">But since we consider it unlikely that Navalny&#8217;s HQ will assume this policy, it is essential to build a new <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">leadership<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> for this process of struggles, capable of combining total unity of action with the liberals of Navalny against the Putin-FSB regime, with total <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">class <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">independence to raise social demands and organise the working class. The task of every <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">honest<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> anti-Putin activist in the country is to organise and link up as closely as possible with the Russian working class, patiently explaining how Putin is the government of the oligarchs, of the FSB, which oppresses other peoples inside and outside Russia, while condemning the Russians themselves to <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">poverty<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, and in this framework to build a leadership\/organisation up to this immense historical task &#8211; of defeating Putin and his regime!<\/span><\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><span lang=\"en-US\">D<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">emand the immediate release of Navalny and all political prisoners!<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span lang=\"en-US\">D<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">emand the full <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">right to<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> organisation and demonstration!<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span lang=\"en-US\">Down with repression! Dissolution of OMON and FSB!<\/span><\/li>\n<li><span lang=\"en-US\">Enough of this oligarchic and repressive Putin government! For an emergency social plan to create jobs, increase <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">wages<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> and pensions. A real plan of mass vaccination, not just TV propaganda. Emergency support for all families affected by the epidemic, minimum income guaranteed by the state. Job stability and rehiring of all those fired during the epidemic, including immigrants. The health safety of workers must be guaranteed in all companies. <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">Those that can\u2019t do it <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">must have their operations interrupted, without loss of wages or dismissal. <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">T<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">he oligarchs <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">must pay the bill<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">, <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">establishing<\/span> <span lang=\"en-US\">progressive<\/span><span lang=\"en-US\"> taxes for big fortunes and the expropriation and nationalisation of the fundamental and strategic <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">economic <\/span><span lang=\"en-US\">sectors.<\/span><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Russia is engulfed in new demonstrations against Vladimir Putin\u2019s government. Demonstrations with a democratic content, against the arrest of an opposition leader, Alexey Navalny and against corruption. The fact that they have spread to the interior of the country, to less privileged regions than the capital Moscow, reflects elements of deep social dissatisfaction accumulated over [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":65822,"menu_order":293,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"litci_post_political_author":"","_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[3553],"tags":[3550,3551,3552,278,3554],"class_list":["post-65821","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-russia","tag-dictatorship","tag-navalny","tag-novichok","tag-putin","tag-russia"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v26.9 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>The meaning of the current demonstrations against Putin - International Worker&#039;s League<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/litci.org\/en\/the-meaning-of-the-current-demonstrations-against-putin\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"The meaning of the current demonstrations against Putin - International Worker&#039;s League\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Russia is engulfed in new demonstrations against Vladimir Putin\u2019s government. Demonstrations with a democratic content, against the arrest of an opposition leader, Alexey Navalny and against corruption. 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