Russia: People continue to mourn Navalny despite arrests

Russia
Despite the arrests, people continue to mourn Navalny

People who had laid flowers for Navalny were also arrested in St. Petersburg. photo

© Uncredited/AP/dpa

Russians in many cities are spontaneously expressing their sadness for Kremlin opponent Alexei Navalny, who, according to the authorities, died in custody. But even paying tribute with flowers and candles is dangerous in the country.

After the death of the Kremlin opponent Alexei Navalny in the prison camp, people in Russia continue to mourn the opposition activist despite arrests and pressure from the authorities. In Moscow and other cities, men in civilian clothes or city cleaning employees cleared spontaneously erected memorial sites for the 47-year-old, who died in custody in the polar region under unclear circumstances. They packed flowers in garbage bags and collected candles and pictures. Media in many parts of Russia reported on Saturday that fresh flowers were still being laid, candles were being lit and pictures were being put up in memory of Navalny.

According to human rights activists, there were more than 100 arrests across the country. The Internet portal ovd.info reported on Saturday morning that more than 60 people had been arrested in St. Petersburg alone. There were arrests in ten cities, including Moscow, Bryansk and Krasnodar. The civil rights activists also gave legal advice on laying flowers and published the number of a telephone hotline for legal help. Many Russians publicly expressed their anger after Navalny’s death.

“How great the power apparatus’ fear of a dead person is when even laying flowers in his memory is viewed as a crime,” wrote the Russian Nobel Peace Prize winner and founder of the Kremlin-critical newspaper Novaya Gazeta, Dmitri Muratov, on the news channel on Saturday Telegram.

Protests have not been allowed for years

According to Russian authorities, Navalny, who was physically weakened after many days in repeated solitary confinement, collapsed on Friday while walking in the prison camp in freezing temperatures. According to the prison service, attempts at resuscitation were unsuccessful. Human rights activists accuse the Russian power apparatus of murder. According to Navalny’s team, a lawyer is on his way to the prison camp north of the Arctic Circle. Accordingly, the prominent anti-corruption campaigner’s employees also assumed that Navalny was deliberately killed.

As a globally recognized Russian opposition leader, Navalny embodied the hope for a future after the dictatorship, wrote expert Alexander Baunow for the Carnegie think tank on Saturday. Even in the prison camp, the politician remained a nuisance for the Kremlin. “But the effort itself to get rid of such an irritating figure also shows that the regime is not as confident in itself and its future as it would like to appear.”

Russia’s power apparatus repeatedly uses violence against dissidents. Protests have not been allowed in the country for years.

dpa

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