Thousands rally to urge Putin to resign

31 Jan, 2010

Up to 10,000 people rallied in the Russian Baltic enclave of Kaliningrad on Saturday demanding the resignation of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin over living costs and unemployment, a rare show of anger with the popular figure. Boris Nemtsov, a leader of opposition movement Solidarity, told Echo Moskvy radio people were protesting against a "25-30 percent" rise in utility bills and against high unemployment.
He said the rally was organised by political parties, including the Communists. "I believe this is a precursor to events likely to roll out over Russia," he said. Russian authorities traditionally increase bills for housing, transportation, water and electricity after the New Year. This can stoke inflation which reached 1.7 percent for the first 25 days of January, exceeding official forecasts.
Despite signs of improvement, Russia remains mired in an economic crisis, with GDP contracting 8.9 percent in the third quarter from a year earlier and unemployment reaching 8.2 percent in December. The Russian government has poured billions of dollars into the economy and supporting crisis-hit regions and towns. Polls show Putin, the former president and a former intelligence officer, remains popular in Russia. A VTsIOM poll this month put his trust rating at 54 percent, the highest among politicians. President Dmitry Medvedev scored 42 percent.

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