Thousands rally on the streets of Khabarovsk as a regional leader is accused of contract killings.

Image copyrightGetty ImagesImage caption
Estimates suggested up to 40,000 people took part
Thousands of people have taken part in protests in Russia’s far east over the arrest of a regional leader.
They marched to the regional government in Khabarovsk shouting slogans against President Vladimir Putin.
Khabarovsk governor Sergei Furgal was detained on Thursday, accused of having ordered the killing of several business people 15 years ago.
Mr Furgal defeated the candidate of Mr Putin’s United Russia party in elections two years ago.
His party, the ultra-nationalist Liberal Democrat Party of Russia, is usually seen as loyal to the Kremlin.
But correspondents say Mr Furgal’s victory was seen as a blow to United Russia’s grip on power in the regions, and he is a popular figure in the far east.
Image copyrightAFPImage caption
Sergei Furgal was remanded in custody on Friday
Estimates by regional media and opposition put the number of demonstrators at between 5,000 and 40,000, in a city of about 600,000 inhabitants.
In a tweet (in Russian), opposition leader Alexei Navalny’s regional office described the rally as “an absolute record for our region and a unique show of unity in society”.
Local media showed footage of demonstrators marching and shouting “freedom!”.
Skip Twitter post by @siberian_timesProtests in Khabarovsk region, Far East of Russia in support of governor Sergey Furgal who was arrested earlier this week on suspicion of ordering multiple murders. Thousands of people are out on the streets of Khabarovsk, Komsomolsk on Amur, Bikin and Amursk pic.twitter.com/MkhXLED66M
— The Siberian Times (@siberian_times) July 11, 2020
End of Twitter post by @siberian_times
Some protesters shouted slogans such as “Putin is a thief” and “Putin, resign”.
Several other towns in the region held smaller protests. Police did not intervene or make any arrests.
Thousands took to the streets of Khabarovsk in what locals are calling the biggest protest they’ve seen in decades.
They’re angry at the arrest of Sergei Furgal and from their chants – against Moscow, and against Vladimir Putin himself – they believe the move is political.
In 2018, Mr Furgal beat the Kremlin’s chosen candidate for governor by a landslide. He’s proved popular locally, cutting the number of civil servants and putting the governor’s yacht up for sale.
Now he’s facing a murder charge, from his pre-political days in the murky world of metals’ trading. Mr Furgal’s supporters want to know why the authorities waited until now, though, 15 years later to arrest him.
The protests were not authorised and in Khabarovsk the meeting point had been taped-off overnight, supposedly for Covid 19 disinfection. But the crowds marched in any case, and the police – on this occasion – didn’t intervene.
Mr Furgal was arrested by masked law enforcement officers on 9 July and brought to Moscow. A day later he was remanded in custody for two months ahead of his trial.
He is accused of organising two murders and one attempted murder of businessmen in 2004-05, and could face life imprisonment.
The arrest comes amid fears of a crackdown on opposition following last week’s vote to approve constitutional reforms that will allow Mr Putin the option of seeking two more terms in office.
On Tuesday, Russian space agency official and former journalist Ivan Safranov was charged with treason, following accusations that he had passed official secrets to a Nato country.