Jailed Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny had an extra 19 years added to his jail term yesterday in a criminal case that he and his supporters said had been trumped up to keep him behind bars and out of politics for even longer.
Navalny, President Vladimir Putin’s fiercest domestic critic, is already serving sentences totalling 11-1/2 years on fraud and other charges that he says are also bogus.
His political movement has been outlawed and declared “extremist”.
A court at his IK-6 penal colony in Melekhovo, about 235km (145 miles) east of Moscow, brought to a close yesterday his trial on six separate charges, including inciting and financing extremist activity and creating an extremist organisation.
The audio feed from the court, where the trial had been held behind closed doors in the prison’s sports hall, was so poor that it was practically impossible to make out what the judge, Andrei Suvorov, was saying.
Journalists were not let into the courtroom but able to watch proceedings on CCTV from a special media room nearby, although the feed was cut almost as soon as the sentence was pronounced.
Navalny’s team said the judge had added 19 years to his existing terms. State prosecutors had asked for 20.
Unconfirmed Russian media reports said that Navalny, now 47, would be 74 years old by the time he got out of prison in 2050.
Dressed in dark prison uniform and flanked by his lawyers, Navalny smiled occasionally as he listened to the judge.
The former blogger, lawyer and corruption investigator has cast himself as a political martyr whose aim is to demonstrate to Russians that it is possible to resist Putin, albeit at great cost.
“For a new, free, rich country to be born, it must have parents. Those who want it. Who expect it and who are willing to make sacrifices for its birth,” Navalny said in his closing statement last month.
In a message posted on social media on Thursday, Navalny had predicted that he would get a long jail term, but said it hardly mattered because he was also threatened with separate terrorism charges that could bring another decade.
Navalny said the purpose of giving him extra jail time was to frighten Russians, but urged them not to be cowed and to think hard about how best to resist what he called the “villains and thieves in the Kremlin”.
“Please consider and realise that by jailing hundreds, Putin is trying to intimidate millions,” he said.
The charges relate to his role in his now-defunct movement inside Russia, which the authorities accused of trying to foment a revolution by seeking to destabilise the socio-political situation.
The US State Department called the verdict “an unjust conclusion to an unjust trial”, while the European Union condemned what it called another politically motivated ruling and called for Navalny’s immediate release.
UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk said the sentence raised renewed serious concerns about judicial harassment and the use of the court system for political purposes in Russia.
German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock called it “sheer injustice”.
A small group of Navalny supporters had gathered outside the penal colony but were not let in to hear the verdict.
Putin, in power since 1999, is expected to run for another six-year presidential term in 2024.
With Russia waging what he calls a “special military operation” in Ukraine and locked in what he describes as an existential battle with the West, Putin says it is vital for the country to remain united.
In February, Putin ordered the FSB security service to raise its game to “identify and stop the illegal activities of those who are trying to divide and weaken our society”.
Sergei Markov, a former Kremlin adviser, questioned whether Navalny’s treatment was too harsh.
“Isn’t this a bit much? Why such cruelties?” Markov wrote on the Telegram app. “He’s not a murderer.”
Navalny, who in the 2010s brought tens of thousands of people onto the streets to oppose Putin’s rule, was detained in January 2021 after returning to Moscow from Germany, where he had been treated for what Western experts said was poisoning by a Soviet-era nerve agent.
The Kremlin, which at one point accused him of working with the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) to undermine Russia, denied involvement and denies persecuting Navalny.
It has portrayed him as an agent of disruption and says he never represented serious political competition, and that his case is purely a matter for the courts.
Navalny’s supporters cast him as a Russian version of South Africa’s Nelson Mandela who will one day be freed from prison to govern the country.
Navalny’s last days before the verdict were spent in a punishment cell where he has been regularly sent over minor infringements of prison rules, according to his team.
In all, he has spent almost 200 days in the cell, according to his team, which has repeatedly accused prison authorities of harassing him.
Navalny said prison officials forced him to share a cell with a sickly inmate and subjected him and other prisoners to “torture by Putin”, making them listen to the Russian president’s speeches.
He has also complained of health problems and major weight loss since being jailed in a strict regime penal colony.
The judge said he would serve his additional sentence in an even more restrictive special prison.
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