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Russian police block mobilization protests, arrest hundreds

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VIDEO COURTESY AP
ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                Russian police detain a demonstrator protesting against mobilization in St. Petersburg, Russia, today.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Russian police detain a demonstrator protesting against mobilization in St. Petersburg, Russia, today.

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                A Russian recruit, right, holds his child, as his mother, left, and other relatives stand outside a military recruitment center in Volgograd, Russia, today. Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday ordered a mobilization of reservists to beef up his forces in Ukraine.
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ASSOCIATED PRESS

A Russian recruit, right, holds his child, as his mother, left, and other relatives stand outside a military recruitment center in Volgograd, Russia, today. Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday ordered a mobilization of reservists to beef up his forces in Ukraine.

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                Russian police detain a demonstrator protesting against mobilization in St. Petersburg, Russia, today.
ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                A Russian recruit, right, holds his child, as his mother, left, and other relatives stand outside a military recruitment center in Volgograd, Russia, today. Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday ordered a mobilization of reservists to beef up his forces in Ukraine.

MOSCOW >> Russian police moved quickly today to disperse peaceful protests against President Vladimir Putin’s military mobilization order, arresting hundreds, including some children, in scores of cities across the vast country.

Police detained nearly 750 people, including over 370 in Moscow and some 150 in St. Petersburg, according to OVD-Info, an independent website that monitors political arrests in Russia. Some of the arrested individuals were minors, OVD-Info said.

The demonstrations followed protests that erupted within hours Wednesday after Putin, in a move to beef up his volunteer forces fighting in Ukraine, announced a call-up of experienced and skilled army reservists.

The Defense Ministry said about 300,000 people would be summoned to active duty, but the order left a door open to many more getting called into service.

Most Russian men ages 18-65 are automatically counted as reservists.

Today, police deployed in force in the cities where protests were scheduled by opposition group Vesna and supporters of jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny. They moved quickly to arrest demonstrators, most of them young people, before they could hold protests.

In Moscow, a heavy contingent of police roamed a downtown area where a protest was planned under pouring rain and checked the IDs of passersby. Officers rounded up those they deemed suspicious and later distributed call-up summons to the men who were arrested.

A young woman climbed on a bench and shouted “We aren’t cannon fodder!” before police took her away.

Police detained a man in a park just outside Red Square and whisked him away as others shouted “Shame!”

Before being rounded up in St. Petersburg, a small group of demonstrators managed to briefly march along the main Nevsky avenue shouting “Putin into the trenches!”

In the city of Novosibirsk in eastern Siberia, over 70 people were detained after singing an innocuous Soviet-era song praising peace.

People who tried to hold individual pickets that are allowed under Russian law also were detained.

The quick police action followed the dispersal of Wednesday’s protests, when over 1,300 people were detained in Moscow, St. Petersburg and other cities.

Putin today signed a hastily approved bill that toughens the punishment for soldiers who disobey officers’ orders, desert or surrender to the enemy.

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