Activists from the Moscow Dormitories movement chain themselves together
Description
In February 2013, about thirty activists from the Moscow Dormitories Movement and an initiative group of large families on the waiting list came to the Department of Housing Policy, dissatisfied with the fact that they had been removed from the housing waiting list on dubious grounds. They claimed that they had been excluded by having the living space of relatives or long-dead parents “attached” to them, and that they had been deprived of subsidies. Among the activists was Yekaterina Maldon, who lived with her four children in a dilapidated 14-square-meter communal apartment.
When officials refused to let the group proceed beyond the lobby, two protesters handcuffed themselves to the railings inside the building. The police called in a lock smith to remove the chains, after which the activists were detained and taken away in a police van, as they refused to leave voluntarily. Several more people were detained on the building’s front steps on charges of “petty hooliganism.” The protest ended without resolving the activists’ housing problems, but it did draw public attention to the issue and generated significant media coverage.
Authors
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