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Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has been handed a 15-day jail sentence for his part in an anti-government protest in Moscow which buoyed the liberal opposition's morale a year before a presidential election.
Key points:
- Navalny found guilty of disobeying police officer
- Opposition leader vows to continue fight
- Moscow says protests were an illegal provocation
Sunday's protest and others like it across Russia were estimated to be the biggest since 2012 and foreshadow a presidential election which Vladimir Putin is expected to contest.
Opinion polls suggest Mr Navalny, who hopes to run against Mr Putin, has little chance of unseating the Russian leader, who enjoys high ratings.
But Mr Navalny and his supporters hope to channel public discontent over corruption to get more support.
Mr Navalny, who will appeal the court's verdict, was found guilty of disobeying a police officer at Sunday's Moscow protest and sentenced to 15 days in jail.
He was also fined for organising the protest, which the authorities said was illegal.
Mr Navalny told reporters in the Moscow courtroom he and his allies would not give up.
"You can't detain tens of thousands of people," he said.
"Yesterday we saw the authorities can only go so far."
Police detained more than 1,000 protesters across Russia on Sunday as crowds took to the streets at Mr Navalny's urging to demonstrate against corruption and demand the resignation of Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev.
Mr Medvedev's spokeswoman has dismissed corruption allegations against him as "propagandistic attacks".
Moscow dismisses US, EU calls to free Navalny
Mr Navalny said Russians would keep protesting for "as long as people see tens of billions of dollars being stolen by top officials".
The Kremlin dismissed the protests as an illegal provocation and rejected United States' and European Union calls to free detainees like Mr Navalny.
"We can't agree with these calls," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on a conference call, saying the police had been professional and properly enforced Russian law.
He said the Kremlin had no problem with people expressing their opinions at protest meetings, but the timing and location had to be agreed with authorities in advance, something he said had not been done in large part on Sunday.
"We can't respect people who deliberately misled minors — in essence children — calling on them to take part in illegal actions in unsanctioned places and offering them certain rewards to do so, thus putting their lives at risk," Mr Peskov said.
A Reuters reporter saw Mr Navalny being loaded into a van after his court appearance.
It was surrounded by supporters holding placards reading "We believe" and "Alexei, we are with you." Police then detained the group of around 20 young people.
Reuters
Topics: courts-and-trials, law-crime-and-justice, unrest-conflict-and-war, government-and-politics, world-politics, russian-federation