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Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny detained in Moscow

Alexei Navalny's detention comes ahead of planned protests over pension reforms
Alexei Navalny's detention comes ahead of planned protests over pension reforms

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny has been detained outside his home in Moscow.

The reason for his arrest on Saturday is not immediately clear, his spokeswoman said on Twitter.

"Navalny was detained two hours ago outside his home. He is now in the Danilovsky police station. They did not say why he is being detained. They took his phone away," Kira Yarmysh tweeted.

In an interview to radio station Ekho Moskvy, Ms Yarmysh said it is "probably linked" to Mr Navalny's plans to hold protests against the Russian government's unpopular pension reform on 9 September.

In a blog post published on Saturday, Mr Navalny said the protests will take place in Moscow and "in almost a hundred other cities."

The opposition politician has criticised the planned pension age hike - a first in nearly 90 years - that has led to a rare outburst of public anger. 

More than 2.8 million Russians have signed a petition against the reform backed by President Vladimir Putin's ruling party.

Mr Navalny, who was barred from taking part in Russia's March presidential election, served a month in prison in June after organising demonstrations ahead of President Putin's fourth inauguration in May.

He was freed from prison the same day the World Cup started in Russia.

The 42-year-old anti-corruption activist has faced a string of charges since he became the leading opposition figure campaigning against Mr Putin's rule at mass demonstrations in 2011 and 2012.