VLADIVOSTOK, Russia, March 20 (Reuters) - At least 1,500 people rallied against  the government of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in the Far East city of  Vladivostok in the first of a string of opposition rallies planned across Russia  on Saturday.
Kremlin critics declared a national day of protest in a bid  to mobilize those angry at the government's handling of the worst economic slump  in a decade, after local elections showed a drop in support for the ruling  party.
To cheers from the crowd on a snow-covered square, leaders of a  coalition of opposition groups read out a list of demands that included the  dismissal of Putin's government and the return of direct elections for  governors, scrapped in 2004.
Most banners focused on economic demands,  including reversing recent hikes in charges for municipal services, increasing  pensions, and cutting taxes on the import of used cars, a major industry in the  Pacific port city.
"People have been left without the means to live, and  they blame the government," said Alexander Krinitsky, an activist with the  Solidarity movement and one of the protest leaders. "We have no choice but to  take to the streets."
Protests in recent months have demonstrated that  opposition to Putin's United Russia party has grown since the start of the  economic crisis, which brought a sudden end to 10 years of growth and has driven  unemployment above 9 percent.
Thousands of protesters were rallying in  several cities across Russia to protest the government's economic policy and  demand more political freedoms. Many participants in Saturday's rallies, dubbed  the Day of Wrath by the opposition, are demanding the resignation of Prime  Minister Vladimir Putin.
About 1,000 people rallied in St.Petersburg  holding placards "Putin's team must resign!" Police didn't intervene. Similar  protests were also planned in Moscow and dozens of other cities throughout  Russia on Saturday.
Putin moved into the prime minister's seat in 2008  after eight years as president but retains much of his power.
Last year,  gross domestic product fell by about 8 percent, Russia's worst performance since  1994.
"What the government has done to us is outrageous," said protester  Sergei Khudenkykh who lost his job importing used cars when the government hiked  tariffs to protect domestic producers. "I don't understand who my little  business bothered."
Organisers complained that the authorities had made  efforts to keep protesters away, including issuing reports to local media that  the protest had been banned and seizing leaflets advertising the  rally.
But only a few dozen police were visible, far fewer than in recent  protests in Russia. In 2008, the Russian government flew riot police from Moscow  to Vladivostok to confront an unsanctioned protest where they detained 100  people.
Organisers said they expected large protests in Moscow, Saint  Petersburg and the Siberian city of Irkutsk. Several other rallies have been  banned by local authorities, raising the possibility of clashes with police.
 
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