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				 Putin claims protests ‘illegal,’ but Russian Constitution allows rallies 
 
			
			Putin claims protests ‘illegal,’ but Russian Constitution allows rallies
 
 
 OAN Newsroom
 UPDATED 6:00 PM PT – Monday, January 25, 2021
 
 Vladimir Putin claimed the latest uptick in support of Alexei Navalny  is illegal, despite the Russian Constitution allowing the right to free  assembly.
 “We have repeatedly encountered situations when the situation went  far beyond the law and shook our society and the state,” Putin stated.  “Where not only people who were engaged in it suffered, but also those  people who had nothing to do with it.”
 Putin also claimed he does not own the multi-billion assets found by Navalny in his latest investigation.
 This came as Putin’s approval rating has tanked below 30%, while  hundreds of thousands of Russians are rallying in support of the  opposition leader.
 “It is very good that people all over the country came out to the  protest on January 23, I was pleasantly surprised by this, because there  are rumors that only Muscovites have a different opinion, but it turns  out that the whole country is thinking about all these political topics,  and I am very glad about it,” Moscow resident Elizaveta Tikhanova said.
 The Russian opposition plans to continue protests across the country  in coming weeks, saying the society is sick and tired of the Kremlin’s  corruption, economic mismanagement and political failures.
 
 
 
 
 Comment - for those who don't care about russia, Putin, and Navalny - look closely at what is happening in America.
 
 DPST/ccp and its LSM is stifling free speech and dissent everywhere and spreading dis-information as Facts and Truth. - just as is Putin.
 
 
 
 and when they came for me - there was No One to speak for me!
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