Alexie Navalny (file picture)

Long prison sentence staring, Russian Oppn leader Navalny goes under trial

Melekhovo (Russia):  Long jail sentence  if not a life term,  seems to share at the outspoken Kremlin critic and Opposition leader Alexei Lavlny. A Russian court on Monday opened a new trial of Navalny,  who is already serving a jail sentence. The trial being on grave charges that could put him behind bars for decades,  Navalny's hopes of public appearance for his anti-Putin causes look bleak. 

The trial is taking place at a maximum security prison in Melekhovo, 250 kilometers (150 miles) east of Moscow, where Navalny — the Kremlin's arch foe — is serving a nine-year sentence for fraud and contempt of court.

Navalny, 47, who exposed official corruption and organised major anti-Kremlin protests, was arrested in January 2021 on his arrival in Moscow back from Germany,  while recuperating from a nerve agent poisoning which he blamed on the Kremlin.

Navalny has said that the new extremism charges, which he rejected as “absurd”, could keep him in prison for another 30 years. He said an investigator told him that he would also face a separate military court trial on terrorism charges that could potentially carry a life sentence.

The new trial comes as Russian authorities are conducting a sweeping crackdown on dissent amid the fighting in Ukraine, and Navalny has been a harsh critic of Moscow's operation there.

The Moscow City Court, which opened the hearing Monday at Navalny's IK-6 prison, didn't let the media into the room and they watched the proceedings via video feed from a separate building. Navalny's parents were not given access either to the courtroom and followed the hearing remotely.

Navalny, clad in his prison garb, looked gaunt but spoke emphatically and gestured energetically as the trial got underway.

The new charges against Navalny relate to the activities of his anti-corruption foundation and statements by his top associates. His allies said the charges retroactively criminalise all the activities of Navalny's foundation since its creation in 2011.

One of Navalny's associates, Daniel Kholodny, was relocated from a different prison to face trial alongside him.

During his current sentence, Navalny has spent months in a tiny one-person cell, also called a “punishment cell”, for purported disciplinary violations such as an alleged failure to properly button his prison robe, properly introduce himself to a guard or to wash his face at a specified time.

Navalny's associates and supporters have accused prison authorities of failing to provide him with proper medical assistance and voiced concern about his failing health.

(Inputs from PTI)

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