In Crimea, a group of young people gathered around a hay effigy with the face of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan set up on the main square of Simferopol. Videos shot at the scene by various media showed the effigy set on fire as people held Russian flags and chanted "Down with IS (Islamic State group)."
Activists in Moscow, belonging to a youth wing of the conservative Rodina party, put a life-size inflatable doll of Erdogan in a coffin and delivered it to the Turkish embassy.
Police detained two organisers. They were let go when law enforcement discovered they were municipal lawmakers, the group said.
The Turkish embassy in Moscow has seen several protests since the Tuesday downing of a Russian Sukhoi jet by Ankara. Turkey summoned the Russian ambassador yesterday over some of the protests, which it called "unacceptable."
The plane incident, which Turkey says was caused by the Russian pilot breaching its airspace, has led to a sharp deterioration of relations, with Moscow today announcing that it will be cancelling visa-free travel for Turkish tourists starting next year.
But anti-Turkish slogans has proliferated after sharp language from President Vladimir Putin, who called Turkey's action a "stab in the back."
Local media even in far-flung Arctic town of Salekhard have seen propaganda posters calling on Russians not to buy Turkish products or travel to Turkey.
"Have you purchased a Turkish product? You've sponsored IS," said another image shared widely on Twitter Friday, showing Erdogan selling a lemon with one hand and a grenade with another.
