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Alexei Navalny Reading Content

Alexei Navalny was Vladimir Putin's most prominent political opponent in Russia. As a anti-corruption activist, Navalny exposed high-level corruption and brought thousands of supporters to street protests. For many years, the Kremlin avoided jailing Navalny, perhaps because it feared sparking further unrest. However, after Navalny was poisoned in 2020 and recovered in Germany, he knew he would not be safe upon returning to Russia but did so anyway. He was immediately arrested and sentenced to prison, where he continued speaking out until his recent reported death, making him the latest prominent Putin critic to be silenced.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
143 views3 pages

Alexei Navalny Reading Content

Alexei Navalny was Vladimir Putin's most prominent political opponent in Russia. As a anti-corruption activist, Navalny exposed high-level corruption and brought thousands of supporters to street protests. For many years, the Kremlin avoided jailing Navalny, perhaps because it feared sparking further unrest. However, after Navalny was poisoned in 2020 and recovered in Germany, he knew he would not be safe upon returning to Russia but did so anyway. He was immediately arrested and sentenced to prison, where he continued speaking out until his recent reported death, making him the latest prominent Putin critic to be silenced.

Uploaded by

Waleed Sarwar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Alexei Navalny was often asked: ‘Do you fear for your life?

'

A supporter holds a picture of Navalny in Berlin after news of his death


By Sarah Rainsford
BBC Eastern Europe correspondent
There was a time when journalists used to ask Alexei Navalny why he was still free. The next
question was often whether he feared for his life.
When Navalny was poisoned with a novichok nerve agent in August 2020, they stopped
asking.

Now Vladimir Putin's most dangerous political opponent has been pronounced dead by the
Russian prison service.

For a long time, the Kremlin appeared to think he was too influential to touch. He had
supporters across the country and a political network like that of no other rival to Putin.
His films exposing high-level corruption were viewed and shared by millions and, every so
often, he brought supporters out onto the streets in mass protest.

The Kremlin loathed that, of course. Putin refused even to utter Navalny's name.
But the calculation seemed to be that jailing him might spark angry reaction that could spiral
into something risky for Putin's hold on power.

Navalny got short spells in police custody. There were criminal charges, but no prison time.
Then in August 2020 the Russian opposition activist collapsed on a flight from Siberia. If the
pilot hadn't made an emergency landing, Navalny would have died.

Tests in Germany confirmed it was an attempted assassination, using a military-grade nerve


agent developed in Soviet times.

The attack happened just as giant protests were gathering force in neighbouring Belarus
against the authoritarian rule of Putin's great ally, Alexander Lukashenko. They were nervous
times for the Kremlin.
When Navalny recovered, he knew he would never be safe again in Russia.
The state prison service had warned him he'd go to jail if he returned. But the life of a
political émigré, increasingly out of touch and irrelevant, was not for him.

Navalny had the power to bring people out onto the street
In Moscow, I reported from many of Navalny's street protests, his court battles and his
attempts to run for political office.

He wasn't universally liked - there was always rivalry among opposition ranks in Russia.
But he was a powerful speaker - a master of social media - and he always struck me as
extremely driven, energetic and passionate about his main cause.

That was removing Vladimir Putin and a coterie of politicians that he denounced, loudly and
repeatedly, as "crooks and thieves".

I wasn't surprised when he returned to Moscow in January 2021, despite everything. And
Navalny wasn't surprised when he was arrested on arrival.

First in court, and then from prison, he continued to speak out.

He would appear via video link for hearings in the multiple criminal cases against him. The
charges kept piling up, all excuses to keep a political opponent locked up.

He looked gaunt, his head shaven and his prison uniform loose. But Navalny would sound as
upbeat and defiant as ever, even speaking from behind bars.
Navalny waves from behind a prison barrier in one of the last videos he was seen in
On his last appearance, the day before he is said to have died, he was still joking.
His persistent cheerfulness was itself an act of resistance, a refusal to be broken.

Navalny never abandoned his belief in what his team called "the beautiful Russia of the
future": the end of Putin's long and repressive rule and the prospect of political change in his
country. But after the activist's arrest, Putin launched his war on Ukraine, Navalny's political
organisation was banned as "extremist" and its members arrested.

Other well-known critics of Putin have been imprisoned or they've fled the country for safety.
For them, and all those who imagined a different Russia, the news of Navalny's death means
the outlook has never looked so bleak.

For me, the most striking realisation is that such news is no longer even a shock.

Alexei Navalny: More coverage


 OBITUARY: Russia's most vociferous Putin critic
 READ MORE: What we know about reports of Navalny's death
 BEHIND BARS: Life in notorious 'Polar Wolf' penal colony
 IN HIS OWN WORDS: Navalny's dark humour during dark times
 SARAH RAINSFORD: Navalny was often asked: 'Do you fear for your life?'
 WATCH: Oscar-winning BBC documentary on Navalny

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