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Mortgage Activists Send Coffins Sailing Down Moscow River

The coffins were set afloat at about 5:30 a.m., according to activist Oxana Semenova, cited by RBC.

A group of activists campaigning on behalf of foreign currency mortgage holders floated 20 coffins, daubed with the names of banks, down the Moscow River on Friday, the RBC news website reported.

Photographs of the stunt showed the coffins nosing their way along the waterway from a launch site on the Karamyshevskaya Naberezhnaya in western Moscow toward the center of the city.

“With their protest, foreign currency mortgage holders have decided to send banks — which are not willing to compromise — floating freely like the ruble. Symbolically this took place on Friday 13th,” said Galina Grigoreva, a representative of the All-Russian Movement for Foreign Currency Mortgage Holders, according to RBC.

A dramatic decline in the value of the ruble in the last six months of 2014 because of plunging oil prices and Western sanctions over the Ukraine crisis hit Russians who had taken out mortgages denominated in euros or dollars hard as their monthly payments skyrocketed.

Russia's Central Bank abandoned targeted interventions to prop up the value of the ruble in November 2014, and allowed to ruble to float freely. The Russian currency lost almost 50 percent of its value against the U.S. dollar last year.

The coffins were set afloat at about 5:30 a.m., according to activist Oxana Semenova, cited by RBC. The names of all the banks were not immediately clear, but photographs showed they included the VTB24 retail branch of state-owned VTB, Absolut Bank and Bank of Moscow.

Many banks attracted clients to mortgages denominated in dollars or euros with more attractive rates and activists claim they were misled. Foreign currency mortgage holders have held several high-profile protests in Moscow this year, including outside the Central Bank and on Red Square.

President Vladimir Putin told members of Russia's Human Rights Council in October that foreign currency mortgage holders made a decision to risk currency fluctuations when they took out their loans, but said that the state should step in to help avoid “extreme situations.”

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