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At the March Against Scoundrels

5 minutes

Description

Opponents of the so-called “Law of Scoundrels” (Magnitsky Act) took to the streets carrying portraits of State Duma deputies. In the campaign headquarters, activists joke about a crookedly pasted poster with Putin’s face: “Stuck on like a bathhouse leaf — no one will be able to peel him off now.” Pensioners sort through placards reading “Shame on Rodnina!”, “Shame on Mironov!”, “Shame on Zhirinovsky!” — everyone has their own “favorites.” One elderly woman hesitates before taking a sign that says “Anatoly Lokot,” sighing: “Well, I’ll take some Lokot at least.” Another remarks, “They’re all from the same place anyway.” “Damn you all, bastards,” others echo. With chants of “Shame on the scoundrels!” and “We are the power here!”, the column moves down the street. Participants then theatrically throw the portraits of the deputies into trash cans. A poster bearing Putin’s image is trampled underfoot — “It won’t wash off,” someone remarks; soon after, however, the soiled portrait is asked to be removed from the frame.

Authors

  • Denis Slepov
  • Lena Horeva

Keywords