From the BBC:
“Alexei Navalny: US and UK
ambassadors to Russia lay tributes”
(Lynne Tracy, the US Ambassador
to Russia, laid flowers at Moscow's Solovetsky Stone in memory of Putin critic
Alexei Navalny)
The US and UK ambassadors to
Moscow have laid flowers to honour Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition
leader who died in prison on Friday. US ambassador Lynne Tracy and Britain's
Nigel Casey were pictured paying their respects at a memorial in Moscow. Navalny's
allies believe he was murdered on the orders of President Vladimir Putin.
Prison authorities say he suffered "sudden death syndrome". About 400
Russians have been detained at gatherings for the campaigner. Pictures showed a
growing pile of flowers left for Navalny at the Solovetsky Stone - a monument
to political repression that has become a major site of tributes for the
47-year-old. "Today at the Solovetsky Stone we mourn the death of Alexei
Navalny and other victims of political repression in Russia," the US
embassy in Moscow said on social media. "We extend our deepest condolences
to Alexei Navalny's family, colleagues and supporters. His strength is an
inspiring example. We honour his memory," the embassy's post added.
(British ambassador Nigel Casey
paid his respects on Saturday to Alexei Navalny)
The UK embassy in Moscow's
account on X, formerly known as Twitter, posted a photo of the British
ambassador visiting the memorial on Saturday, and in an earlier post called for
a "full and transparent investigation into Navalny's death." They
said the Foreign Office had summoned a representative of the Russian embassy,
adding "we make it clear that we hold the Russian authorities fully
responsible for Alexei's death."
Navalny's wife, Yulia, posted an
Instagram on Sunday a photo of herself with her husband and the caption "I
love you". She had earlier called for the Russian president and his allies
to be held accountable for her husband's death. The EU's foreign policy chief,
Josep Borrell, confirmed on X that he would welcome Ms Navalnaya at the bloc's
Foreign Affairs Council on Monday. He said that EU ministers would honour
Navalny's memory and "send a strong message of support to freedom fighters
in Russia".
As tributes pour in for the
Kremlin critic, questions remain over the whereabouts of Navalny's body, with
allies accusing the Russian authorities of hiding his body. Russian prison
authorities said on Friday that the opposition activist had become unwell
following a walk and had lost consciousness at the remote IK-3 prison in the
Arctic Circle - also known as the Siberian "Polar Wolf" penal colony.
Navalny allies said the politician's mother, Lyudmila Navalnaya, was told his
body would only be handed over once a post-mortem examination had been
completed, and that the cause of death was said to be "sudden death
syndrome" - a generic, vague term for a condition which could cover a
cardiac arrest with no apparent cause. Navalny's allies said that Ms Navalnaya
was told his body had been taken to the town of Salekhard, near the prison
complex, but when she arrived the morgue was closed.
Prison officials reportedly told
her an initial post-mortem examination was inconclusive and a second would have
to be carried out. The Russian president has not publicly commented on
Navalny's death, but in the immediate aftermath, the Kremlin said it was aware
and the president had been informed. Russia's Foreign Ministry said it rejected
"biased and unrealistic" assessments over his cause of death made
during a meeting with British officials on Saturday.
^ It’s important for the US and
the World to remember Alexei Navalny and Putin’s role in his murder. ^
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