A Moscow march to protest election fraud unexpectedly drew tens of
thousands of people on Saturday. With 40 percent of Russian adults
online, many say social media, including the Russian social networking
site VKontakte, has made it possible for a long stalled opposition
movement in Russia to organize a rally that size.
Last Saturday Danila Lindele stood in downtown Moscow tweeting about the revolution.
Dressed
in a sweater his mother knit him, the 23-year-old is a new breed of
Russian activist more likely to reach for an iPad than a bullhorn. "When
it comes to the rally today, Internet has played an extremely vital
role in making it happen because nothing was broadcast on television.
Everything is disseminated through Twitter, Facebook and through our VK
site," he said.
After recent parliamentary elections, YouTube
was flooded with videos alleging vote rigging by the country's ruling
United Russia party.
Russia's state-run media on the other hand was conspicuously silent.
Protesters
like 22-year-old student and first-time election observer Denis
Kandrotenko are keenly aware of the information divide between
television and the Internet. "I know the real amount of votes United
Russia received during the elections. It received very few votes. And
because of that the people, rose up and came out today. They want fair
and honest elections, not what they show us on TV," he said.
According
to a report by Russian search giant Yandex, Russia has over one million
Twitter users. A five-fold increase over last year.
And nearly
40,000 people signed up to attend Saturday's rally on Facebook, despite
efforts by state-run television to brand such gatherings as dangerous
and the protesters themselves as violent rabble rousers.
Masha
Lipman, an analyst at Carnegie Center Moscow, admits the Internet is an
important tool, but says it was election fraud, not micro-blogging, that
galvanized people. “As soon as the mood was one of action, not just
sitting there and grumbling, the Internet came in very handy and indeed
played a huge role ... in actually planning and organizing the rally
that brought together an unprecedented number of people," she said.
Tens
of thousands of protesters gathered in Moscow on Saturday, the largest
number to rally since the fall of the Soviet Union nearly two decades
ago. Organizers were keenly aware they couldn't have done it without the
Internet.
“I want to say a big hello to Twitter and Facebook.
Hoorah Internet! Today they [points at Kremlin] can't control us thanks
to social networking sites and us," said writer Sergei Sergunov.
Still,
Carnegie's Masha Lipman said, "There were revolutions before the age of
Internet and even before radio and television. We had a powerful
showing of public sentiments and public activism back 20 years ago, late
80s. ... our rallies were 10 times bigger than what we had in Russia on
Saturday."
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