The Phnom Penh Post

Tensions between Russia and the West over Navalny

-

TENSIONS that could sour relations between Russia and the West, pre-eminently Europe and the US, have intensifie­d ever since opposition figure Alexei Navalny returned to Moscow after his discharge from a hospital in Germany.

There is an element of bitter irony that clouds his return following treatment for nerve agent poisoning – allegedly at the behest of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The Kremlin has claimed that Navalny’s return and the resultant tension with the Western powers represent “an absolutely internal matter”.

Perhaps on the face of it, it is. But it shall not be easy for the US and Europe, across the Atlantic to accept the global condemnati­on of his arrest at the Moscow airport and spirited calls for his early release.

Not the least because Navalny has blamed the Putin government for his poisoning.

Tensions between Russia and the West have distinctly exacerbate­d over the past several days, with some EU countries calling for an additional cache of sanctions against Russia.

The Kremlin remains ever so adamant, going by the statement of its spokesman, Dmitry Peskov: “We are talking about a fact of non-compliance with the Russian law by a citizen of Russia. This is an absolutely internal matter and we will not allow anyone to interfere in it and do not intend to listen to such statements.”

For the record, Navalny was detained at passport control at Moscow’s Sherenetye­vo airport after flying in from Berlin, where he was treated for the poisoning in August. Russia’s most prominent opposition figure and anti-corruption campaginer, Navalny allegedly violated the probation terms of his suspended sentence in a 2014 money-laundering conviction, which was deemed arbitrary by the European Court of Human Rights.

Officials are seeking that he serves the three-and-halfyear suspended sentence in prison.

Navalny has interprete­d the crackdown against him as a sign of Putin’s fear. But the Kremlin has insisted that Navalny had violated the law.

The Kremlin claims that questions the law-enforcemen­t entity had for Navalny have “nothing whatsoever to do with the Russian President”. Attitudes have, therefore, stiffened on either side of the fence that divdes the Kremlin from the anti-establishm­ent segment.

Even the UN Human Rights office has raised alarm over

Navalny’s arrest, indeed a response that has been clothed with the demand for his immediate release. The office of the UN High Commission for Human Rights has let it be known that it was “deeply troubled” by Navalny’s arrest.

It has appealed to the Russian government to respect his right to the due process of the law. Since the government in Moscow is incidental­ly headed by Putin, its defiance of Western democracie­s cannot be readily agreeable. And thereby hangs a tale.

After all, Navalny deserves better treatment, and not behind bars.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia