Thousands marched through Moscow on Saturday to protest against the rule of Vladimir Putin in a test of the opposition's challenge to the Russian president four months after his inauguration.
Waving nationalist flags, brandishing placards calling for early elections or wearing T-shirts in support of jailed members punk band Pussy Riot, the diverse groups of protestors marched with the chant "1-2-3, Putin go!"
The protest was dubbed the "March of Millions" by organisers, who hope to show they still have the momentum created by initial demonstrations in December against fraud-tainted elections and Putin's 12-year grip on power.
Police said that 14,000 people had joined the protest, but organiser and far-left leader Sergei Udaltsov said the numbers were far higher -- at least 150,000. "We do not know who taught him to count," retorted a police spokesman.
Split between liberals, nationalists and the extreme left, the anti-Putin opposition has been struggling with its own divisions and accusations it lacks any coherent message beyond hostility to the Kremlin.
"Leftwing organisations on the left side of the boulevard!" police shouted through loudspeakers as the march got under way with the different political movements marching in separate files.
The protestors converged to hear speeches on Sakharov Avenue, named after the great Soviet dissident and scientist Andrei Sakharov, who was sent into internal exile by the Soviet authorities.
This protest has a bigger focus on social injustice than previous actions and for the first time the Russian Communist Party -- the biggest opposition party in parliament -- is represented.
The march has been given extra impetus by the expulsion from parliament of anti-Putin deputy Gennady Gudkov over alleged conflicting business interests, in what the lawmaker's supporters said was crude revenge for opposing Putin.
It is also the first mass action since the sentencing of three members of Pussy Riot to two years in prison for an anti-Putin protest in an Orthodox cathedral, which has become a rallying cause for many in the opposition.
"The authorities are afraid of the people so they are experimenting with pressure," said former prime minister turned Kremlin foe Mikhail Kasyanov, adding that demonstrators had taken to the streets to call for "an end to repression".
Protestor Anna Roskina, 33, a psychologist, held a banner saying "Freedom for Pussy Riot! Freedom for us all!"
Gudkov was present at the march as well as other top opposition figures such as anti-corruption crusader Alexei Navalny, who is arguably the most charismatic anti-Putin figure.
Police, who have warned of possible "provocations" at the rally, have said 7,000 members of the security forces are being deployed to ensure order.
There was also a more light-hearted touch, with some mocking Putin's recent "birdman" stunt, in which he flew a hang-glider to guide rare cranes on their winter migration.
One protestor dressed up in a white suit and a helmet of the kind worn by Putin with the slogan "I teach cranes to fly" written on his back.
The head of Russia's consumer and health protection agency Gennady Onishchenko sought to deter people from taking part, warning the protestors of the risks of catching colds and flu.
"Look around you and check you are near no one who is coughing and sneezing," he told would-be marchers.
Billionaire tycoon Mikhail Prokhorov, who came third in the March 4 presidential elections and took part in some previous protests, said he would not be joining the march as the opposition had no coherent programme, said radio station Moscow Echo.
Thousands-strong protests were also expected in major regional centres including the second city of Saint Petersburg and Yekaterinburg in the Urals.
A protest in the Far East city of Vladivostok only mustered around a few dozen people, police and organisers said. A protest in the Urals city of Perm gathered 300 people, local news reports said.
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