From the DW:
“Alexei
Navalny arrest: Return to Russia seen as 'brave step'”
After
recovering in Berlin from reported Novichok poisoning, opposition figure Alexei
Navalny has been arrested upon his return to Russia. Supporters say he is a
political prisoner. Juri Rescheto reports from Moscow. An arrest warrant
instead of flowers. With barely enough time to leave the plane, Alexei Navalny
was taken into police custody. It was a cold reception for one of the country's
own citizens even by Russian standards; a citizen that almost lost his life the
last time he was on Russian soil. Navalny wasn't the only one having to contend
with the cold. As they waited for his arrival, political activists,
international journalists and Russian police officers had to put up with
below-freezing temperatures, harsh even for a Moscow winter. Dozens of police
vehicles and extra metal fencing helped turn the Vnukovo airport south of
Moscow into an impenetrable fortress. The press was denied entry into the
airport's arrival hall. A public event to meet Navalny at the airport that was
organized online was quickly declared illegal. Countless activists and
opposition figures were warned to stay away from Vnukovo, and Russian police
officers made personal house calls to many of Navalny's confidants. The government did its utmost to attract as
little attention as possible for the return of the "Berlin patient,"
as he is often called by the Kremlin. Just minutes before the plane's scheduled
landing, authorities redirected the flight to a different airport outside the
Russian capital. But their efforts appear to have done nothing to quell
admiration for Navalny, whose supporters are calling him a hero — all the more
so after his arrest.
A 'fearless
politician' who disturbs Putin For the independent political scientist
Kirill Rogov, Navalny's return is a "brave step." He says the
44-year-old opposition leader is a "fearless politician," whose
arrest the Kremlin had long avoided. "Putin is convinced that opposition
figures can increase their political influence manyfold while in prison,"
Rogov says. Navalny was reportedly poisoned last August on a flight in
Siberia with the neurotoxin Novichok. Surprisingly, Russian authorities allowed
Navalny to be flown to Germany, where he was treated in Berlin's Charité
hospital. The green light allegedly came from Russian President Vladimir Putin
himself. The fact that Navalny has now been arrested, after suffering
such a high-profile health emergency, is a sign that Putin is afraid of him,
Rogov tells DW. "Navalny has developed a following. Outside of Russia too.
And that's exactly what the Kremlin doesn't like. It doesn't want an opposition
politician that 70 or 80% of Russians know, and who they can't control."
But the Kremlin seems to be hoping Navalny may be easier to control in prison.
Opposition politician Dmitry Gudkov says the Kremlin has miscalculated when
it comes to Navalny's arrest. In a DW interview, he compared Navalny with
Nelson Mandela, the South African revolutionary jailed during apartheid who
later became president. "Mandela ascended to power despite his detention.
The same thing will surely happen with Navalny. But then the Kremlin will be
giving the world the message: 'Look! First we tried to kill him, and when that
didn't work, we put him in jail!'"
A range of
charges against Navalny It is unclear how long Navalny will remain behind
bars. Officially, he stands accused of violating conditions of a suspended
sentence for a 2014 fraud conviction, which international observers have
criticized as unfounded. Russian police say Navalny failed to properly
register his stay in Germany with them as required by his sentence. A court
must now decide if the rest of Navalny's suspended sentence should be served in
prison. In addition, new charges were levelled against him in December. He now
stands accused of embezzling donations to his anti-corruption foundation.
Critics say it is yet another attempt to silence the politician. Moscow
denies any involvement in Navalny's poisoning. Instead, Kremlin officials have
repeatedly raised accusations of a Western-backed plot and have refused to
investigate the attack. During his yearly press conference in December 2020, Putin
responded to a question about Navalny's poisoning with sarcasm: "Who needs
him? If we had wanted to do that, then we would have seen it through to the
end." His comments came after Navalny said that a "killer
unit" of Russia's internal security service, the FSB, was responsible for
the attempt on his life. Navalny also says he called one of his alleged
assassins under a false name, prompting the agent to admit to being involved in
the poisoning.
^ It’s clear
that Putin and his henchmen are extremely scared of Navalny – otherwise they
wouldn’t have tried to kill him and try to stop him at every turn. Putin’s
actions only make him look weak and make Navalny more beloved within
Russia and around the world. ^
https://www.dw.com/en/alexei-navalny-arrest-return-to-russia-seen-as-brave-step/a-56256499
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