From the BBC:
“Alexei
Navalny: Putin critic loses appeal against jailing”
Russian
opposition leader Alexei Navalny has lost an appeal against his jailing for
violating the terms of a suspended sentence. Navalny was detained last
month after returning to Russia from Germany, where he was being treated for a
near-fatal nerve agent attack. He has blamed Russian President Vladimir
Putin for the attack and says the charges against him are fabricated. The
Kremlin denies any involvement in his poisoning. Hours later, he was
convicted in the same court of slandering a World War Two veteran and fined the
equivalent of $11,500 (£8,200). The veteran had appeared in a video
supporting constitutional reforms, approved last year, which would allow Mr
Putin to stand for election for two further terms. Navalny had accused
people appearing in the video of being traitors. In the first case,
Navalny was accused of breaking the terms of a 2014 suspended sentence for
embezzlement that required him to report regularly to Russian police.
In court, in a
speech that referenced both the Bible and the Harry Potter book series, he
argued the charges were absurd as he was unable to report to the police while
recovering from the attack. "The whole world knew where I was," he
said. "Once I'd recovered, I bought a plane ticket and came home." Navalny
spent a month in a Berlin hospital, two weeks of his stay in an induced coma. In
court, he brought up the evil Voldemort from Harry Potter, likening him to Mr
Putin and suggesting he would not succumb to attempts to make him feel alone. Explaining
that he is a Christian, Navalny quoted from the Bible: "Blessed are those
who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be satisfied." The
judge rejected his case, though he did cut six weeks off the nearly three-year
sentence imposed on Navalny. The Kremlin critic will return to the penal colony
where he is serving his time.
Analysis box
by Steve Rosenberg, Moscow correspondent
When he was led
into the dock, Alexei Navalny made the V for Victory sign. But when the
judgement came he had little to celebrate. His prison sentence was upheld
(though reduced slightly, by a month-and-a-half). With its most vocal critic
off to prison, the Kremlin will be hoping it has neutralised the threat he
poses as an anti-corruption campaigner and as the only opposition leader in
Russia capable of bringing large crowds onto the streets nationwide. Moscow
will now expect more criticism and pressure from the West. This week President
Putin's spokesman accused America and Europe of talking about sanctions with
"maniacal persistence". But the Kremlin will try to turn Western
criticism in its favour - to bolster the official narrative that Navalny is a
Western stooge and that Russia is a country under siege.
The European
Court of Human Rights, of which Russia is a member, says Navalny should be
released out of concern for his life. But Russia said the call was
"unlawful". Navalny's supporters see the charges as an attempt to
silence him and thwart his political ambitions. He has been a persistent thorn
in the side of President Putin, making allegations of corruption including a
claim the president owns a lavish palace by the Black Sea. Navalny's allies are
seeking to challenge pro-Kremlin parties in parliamentary elections this year,
and President Putin warned on Thursday against foreign interference. The
Kremlin was dismissive on Saturday, its spokesman Dmitry Peskov telling
reporters Navalny's political future was "absolutely none of our
business". All citizens have "the right to elect and be
elected", he said, "all citizens who are somehow not affected in
their rights in accordance with our Russian laws".
European
foreign ministers are set to meet on Monday to discuss imposing further
sanctions on Russia over the case. There are divisions among EU members, with
Germany going ahead with the Nord Stream 2 project which would transfer gas
directly from Russia to Germany. The project is opposed by Poland and the
Baltic states. On Friday Lithuania said it should be paused until after
September's parliamentary elections in Russia.
^ It is no
surprise that his Appeal was rejected. Putin wants to make an example of him
and will go to any length to stop him and his supporters. The good thing is
that the whole world knows and understands what this case is really about and finds
Putin and the Russian “Justice System” responsible. ^
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