Thousands In Moscow Protest Crimea Military Action

REPORTS: Thousands In Moscow Protest Crimea Action

Tens of thousands gathered in Moscow to protest Russian military action in Crimea, according to the Agence France Presse. The news agency estimated that there were 50,000 in the crowd at the "March Of Peace." The protest comes a day before Crimea's scheduled vote over whether to secede from Ukraine.

Pussy Riot members Maria Alyokhina and Nadezhda Tolokonnikova were in attendance:

Some demonstrators were detained for allegedly carrying Nazi flags, police told Russian news agency RIA Novosti.

Moscow City Hall granted permission earlier in the week for the anti-war rally to be held Saturday, the Moscow Times reported. The organizers requested a permit for a protest of 50,000 people, according to the newspaper.

A counter-protest of 15,000 people also gathered in Moscow on Sunday "in support of Crimea and against fascism," the Russian Interior Ministry told the Kyviv Post. Police kept the two events apart from each other in order to avoid clashes, Bloomberg News reported.

MOSCOW (AP) — Tens of thousands of anti-government protesters marched in central Moscow Saturday, a day before a Kremlin-backed referendum in Crimea on whether to break away from Ukraine and join Russia.

It was the largest anti-government demonstration since 2012. Demonstrators waved Russian and Ukrainian flags, while opposition activists — including two members of the Pussy Riot punk band — shouted "Say no to war!" and "Putin, go away!" from the stage.

Protesters also held up banners that read: "For your freedom and for ours!" One demonstrator held up a plate of salo — cured pork fat that is a staple of Ukrainian cuisine and adored by many Russians — along with a poster that read: "Make salo, not war!"

Nearby, a rally of several thousand was held close to the Kremlin in support of Russian intervention in Crimea.

Crimea's referendum Sunday has been loudly condemned as illegitimate by much of the international community. As heavily armed forces apparently under Russian command have effectively taken control of the peninsula, the vote to join Russia has been widely criticized as a mere formality.

Russian support for reclaiming Crimea majority has intensified amid weeks of relentless state television coverage of purported aggression toward ethnic Russians by the new Kiev government, which came to power after Ukraine's Moscow-friendly president, Viktor Yanukovych, fled the country in February.

While President Vladimir Putin's ratings have risen since he announced Russia's willingness to use force in Ukraine, the anti-government demonstration Saturday showed that not everyone is happy with the decision.

"I love Ukraine — it's Putin who needs war and an empire, not me," said Dmitry Maksimov, a 29-year-old lawyer who held a bouquet of flowers dyed blue and yellow, the colors of the Ukrainian flag.

Nadezhda Tolokonnikova, a member of Pussy Riot, called for defiance against the authorities.

"Don't believe it when they say that we are few, that we are weak. Together we will change this country," she said in a speech from a stage.

None of Russia's state-owned news channels showed footage from the anti-government protest, and instead showed live video from the rally near the Kremlin, where large gangs of men from a group called "Essence of Time" dressed in uniform red jackets and marched to the sound of Soviet-era military music in disciplined columns.

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