The Prague Post - A year after arrest, Navalny says no 'regret' about return to Russia

EUR -
AED 4.24886
AFN 76.755988
ALL 96.705015
AMD 442.955826
ANG 2.070898
AOA 1060.912737
ARS 1625.564282
AUD 1.782648
AWG 2.088273
AZN 1.971388
BAM 1.956939
BBD 2.329306
BDT 141.154573
BGN 1.95614
BHD 0.432708
BIF 3405.840612
BMD 1.156938
BND 1.506102
BOB 8.002553
BRL 6.169262
BSD 1.156493
BTN 102.503415
BWP 15.526833
BYN 3.941462
BYR 22675.988338
BZD 2.325823
CAD 1.625325
CDF 2487.417507
CHF 0.931775
CLF 0.027843
CLP 1092.288933
CNY 8.236648
CNH 8.243359
COP 4373.226322
CRC 580.647896
CUC 1.156938
CUP 30.658862
CVE 110.329197
CZK 24.306697
DJF 205.611509
DKK 7.470586
DOP 74.302913
DZD 149.721294
EGP 54.319055
ERN 17.354073
ETB 178.522661
FJD 2.642737
FKP 0.88285
GBP 0.879199
GEL 3.129564
GGP 0.88285
GHS 12.646194
GIP 0.88285
GMD 84.456898
GNF 10038.841239
GTQ 8.862042
GYD 241.954968
HKD 9.001269
HNL 30.407693
HRK 7.536416
HTG 153.9289
HUF 384.867503
IDR 19304.092011
ILS 3.773991
IMP 0.88285
INR 102.550427
IQD 1514.981513
IRR 48707.097807
ISK 146.445681
JEP 0.88285
JMD 185.618004
JOD 0.820315
JPY 177.514855
KES 149.480811
KGS 101.174688
KHR 4654.668151
KMF 487.071379
KPW 1041.220657
KRW 1684.490865
KWD 0.355069
KYD 0.963752
KZT 607.123759
LAK 25109.284637
LBP 103560.815603
LKR 352.501201
LRD 211.171961
LSL 20.032989
LTL 3.416138
LVL 0.699821
LYD 6.314674
MAD 10.720138
MDL 19.717217
MGA 5197.957111
MKD 61.557148
MMK 2428.71356
MNT 4145.387243
MOP 9.26415
MRU 45.809655
MUR 53.11547
MVR 17.822678
MWK 2005.401538
MXN 21.347365
MYR 4.831419
MZN 73.986633
NAD 20.032556
NGN 1661.363625
NIO 42.555497
NOK 11.754927
NPR 164.005264
NZD 2.055318
OMR 0.44128
PAB 1.156558
PEN 3.902838
PGK 4.882841
PHP 68.034333
PKR 327.015732
PLN 4.24089
PYG 8182.761253
QAR 4.214953
RON 5.089144
RSD 118.204806
RUB 93.56087
RWF 1680.363218
SAR 4.339343
SBD 9.522286
SCR 15.794975
SDG 694.74563
SEK 11.025394
SGD 1.505221
SHP 0.868003
SLE 26.845208
SLL 24260.414632
SOS 660.875971
SRD 44.656701
STD 23946.284488
STN 24.514688
SVC 10.118888
SYP 12790.858732
SZL 20.040007
THB 37.479056
TJS 10.674072
TMT 4.060853
TND 3.418489
TOP 2.709669
TRY 48.833247
TTD 7.83946
TWD 35.844032
TZS 2840.283621
UAH 48.493817
UGX 4047.442521
USD 1.156938
UYU 46.056799
UZS 13947.115322
VES 264.006395
VND 30439.043529
VUV 141.260132
WST 3.258059
XAF 656.333224
XAG 0.023934
XAU 0.000289
XCD 3.126684
XCG 2.084249
XDR 0.817973
XOF 656.3389
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.933908
ZAR 20.019316
ZMK 10413.836097
ZMW 26.164885
ZWL 372.533622
  • RBGPF

    -0.7800

    75.22

    -1.04%

  • NGG

    1.4600

    77.75

    +1.88%

  • CMSC

    0.0700

    23.85

    +0.29%

  • RIO

    0.0600

    69.33

    +0.09%

  • GSK

    -0.4700

    46.63

    -1.01%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    15.76

    0%

  • RELX

    -1.1200

    42.27

    -2.65%

  • BTI

    0.3800

    54.59

    +0.7%

  • RYCEF

    0.0800

    14.88

    +0.54%

  • AZN

    0.8100

    84.58

    +0.96%

  • BCC

    -0.0900

    70.64

    -0.13%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.74

    -0.07%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    24.1

    +0.37%

  • VOD

    0.2400

    11.58

    +2.07%

  • BCE

    0.0200

    23.19

    +0.09%

  • BP

    0.7600

    36.58

    +2.08%

A year after arrest, Navalny says no 'regret' about return to Russia

A year after arrest, Navalny says no 'regret' about return to Russia

The Kremlin's most prominent critic Alexei Navalny said Monday he did not regret returning to Russia a year ago, despite his jailing and a historic crackdown on the opposition.

Text size:

Navalny was detained in a Moscow airport on his return to Russia from Germany on January 17 last year, ushering in a months-long crackdown that has seen his most prominent allies imprisoned or exiled.

"I don't regret it for a second," Navalny wrote in a post on Instagram from a penal colony outside Moscow.

"Having served my first year in prison, I want to tell everyone exactly what I shouted to those gathered outside the court when a convoy led me to a police van: don't be afraid of anything," Navalny added.

"This is our country and we have no other."

Navalny's August 2020 poisoning with the Soviet-designed nerve agent Novichok and his subsequent arrest sparked widespread condemnation abroad as well as sanctions from Western capitals.

Moscow has refused to open a probe into the attempt on his life, claiming there is insufficient evidence to investigate and blaming Berlin for not cooperating.

On his return to Russia, Navalny was jailed for more than two years on old fraud charges he says are politically motivated.

Ahead of the anniversary of his arrest, Russia last week added two of the opposition leader's closest aides to a list of "terrorists and extremists".

Ivan Zhdanov, 33, led Navalny's Anti-Corruption Foundation, which produced hugely popular video probes accusing the authorities of systemic graft, while 41-year-old Leonid Volkov headed Navalny's network of regional offices.

Both of those organisations were banned by Russian courts and shuttered by staff fearing prosecution.

Last month, investigators questioned several of Navalny's former regional coordinators, including Ksenia Fadeyeva, who is also a local lawmaker in the Siberian city of Tomsk.

- 'In living hell' -

Allies say she is facing up to 12 years in prison for working with an extremist organisation.

Investigators last year launched a new extremism probe against Navalny that could see the opposition leader spend up to 10 more years in jail.

The European Parliament last year awarded Navalny the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought after he was nominated, but passed over, for the Nobel Peace Prize.

In a statement Monday, the EU urged Russia to release Navalny "without further delay" and noted Russia's legal system "continues to be instrumentalised" against the opposition leader.

Ramping up a historic crackdown on critical voices in post-Soviet Russia, authorities have designated dozens of rights groups, media outlets, journalists and anti-Kremlin figures "foreign agents".

In December, courts ordered the shutdown of the country's most prominent rights group, Memorial.

The group chronicled Stalin-era purges and campaigned for the rights of political prisoners, migrants and other disadvantaged groups.

A court on Monday turned down one appeal Navalny had brought against authorities over his treatment in the penal colony and postponed another.

Navalny appeared via video link, sitting behind bars in a prison uniform before the Petushki district court in the Vladimir region where he is being held.

The cases heard on Monday concerned his prison salary and his designation as prone to "extremism", which news agencies said the court would revisit in three months.

Amnesty International said Monday the year since Navalny's arrest had been marked by "an unprecedented campaign of repression" in Russia.

"On the anniversary of his detention, Navalny and the political activists associated with him are in a living hell," said Marie Struthers, Amnesty's Eastern Europe and Central Asia Director.

R.Rous--TPP