Russian authorities say they have released all demonstrators who were detained for taking part in unauthorized rallies across Russia that coincided with Russian President Vladimir Putin’s birthday on October 7.
Meanwhile, Russian civil organizations reported new detentions in central Moscow on October 8.
The Interior Ministry said that a total of 136 demonstrators were taken into custody the day before for taking part in 26 illegal rallies across the country.
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It said 71 charges for administrative offenses were filed against demonstrators and that 60 of the people who were detained must make court appearances.
However, a group that monitors politically motivated arrests said it documented at least 271 cases of people being arrested during the October 7 protests.
The Moscow-based OVD-Info said at least 62 people were detained in St. Petersburg on October 7.
They included Russian opposition leader Aleksei Navalny’s campaign coordinator, Mikhail Sosin, and the campaign's lawyer, Denis Mikhailov.
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Navalny’s campaign coordinators in Perm, Tver, and Stavropol were also detained, as well as numerous campaign activists across the country who were demanding that Navalny be allowed to run in Russia's 2018 presidential election.
Rallies and protests were held in dozens of Russian cities -- including Moscow, Vladivostok, Khabarovsk, Ulan-Ude, Chita, and Stavropol.
OVD-Info and the Open Russia civic movement said that more than a dozen Navalny supporters were detained in the center of the Russian capital on October 8 while holding small demonstrations.
They said that the detentions took place in Manezh Square by the Kremlin walls and outside the nearby building of the lower house of parliament, the State Duma.
Amnesty International on October 7 urged authorities to immediately release detained protesters and investigate allegations that police used “abusive force” against demonstrators in St. Petersburg and Yakutsk.
“The Kremlin’s intent is clear: to choke the life out of the protest movement. But it has also become clear in recent months that this reproachful goal cannot be achieved," said Denis Krivosheev, deputy director for Europe and Central Asia at Amnesty International.