Rallying for Navalny

Weekly

Hello! This week our top story is the nationwide protest that took place over the arrest of opposition leader Alexei Navalny. We also look at why the son of one of Russia’s richest men has been kicked out of the family business and sent off to do military service, and how a Russian company helped save messaging app Parler.

Apologies for the lateness of our newsletter this week: we decided to delay its publication to allow us to cover the opposition protests that took place Saturday.

Russia rocked by nationwide protests in support of Navalny

Demonstrations Saturday in support of detained opposition leader Alexei Navalny were the biggest protests to go ahead without an official permit for many years. An estimated 20,000 to 40,000 people turned out in Moscow, and overall up to 100,000 were on the streets in about 100 cities. Over 3,000 people were arrested — another record — but there was no evidence of the kind of widespread police brutality that might trigger public outrage.

The build-up

A Moscow court arrested Navalny for 30 days Monday after he returned from Germany (where he recovered following an attempted nerve agent assassination likely orchestrated by the Russian security services). His supporters immediately called for protests, and released a video accusing President Vladimir Putin of corruption and showing details of a Black Sea palace allegeld built on his orders. Within four days, the video accrued over 70 million views.

The TikTok Factor

A big issue for both sides was the expected involvement of large numbers of schoolchildren inspired by TikTok posts. Tags linked to the protests received over 200 million views on the platform. All the while, state-owned media and online propaganda outlets drummed home their message that the opposition was trying to use kids as ‘human shield’ at the rallies.

School teachers handed out brochures to parents detailing the consequences of participating in unsanctioned protests. The leaflets even made it into kindergartens – an acquaintance of one of The Bell’s editors shared a link shared by a teacher at his three-year-old’s Moscow pre-school.

However, neither side was capable of reliably predicting the impact TikTok might have on the protests. “Nobody knows to what extent a viral wave on TikTok will translate into a wave of people on the streets. This will be a first, vital experiment,” Leonid Volkov, a colleague of Navalny’s told independent outlet VTimes on the eve of the demonstrations.

What happened

Reporters for news agency Reuters estimated the number of demonstrators in downtown Moscow on Saturday at 40,000, while crowd counting organization White Counter put turnout up to 20,000.

Key takeaways

Mordashov’s son is conscripted, booted out of family business

Nikita Mordashov is one of the most privileged children on the planet: his father, Alexei Mordashov controls steelmaker Severstal and is ranked the fourth richest person in Russia by Forbes magazine with an estimated fortune of $16.8 billion. But this week Nikita was sent off to do military service and stripped of his stake in the family business. This is a unique way of treating your children in Russia. Why is Mordashov behaving so differently?

Why the world should care

Amid speculation about how Russia’s ageing post-Soviet oligarchs will transfer their wealth, the Mordashov story has attracted significant attention. It highlights an interest in how Russia’s super-wealthy lead their lives, and some of the long-term issues facing big business.

Russian IT company saves U.S. far right app Parler

Messaging service Parler, popular among the far right and ex-U.S. President Donald Trump’s more radical supporters, was removed by the Apple store and blocked by Amazon earlier this month. But it bounced back this week with a Russian accent. Parler’s return is at least partially due to the work of Russian IT firm DDoS-Guard, whose other clients include state organizations.

Why the world should care

As President Joe Biden makes his first steps in foreign policy, any revelation about Russian links to far right U.S. groups is fodder for those in Washington arguing for tough action against Moscow.