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Russia: Alexei Navalny declares hunger strike in jail

Jailed Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny has announced on social media he will go on hunger strike until he receives proper medical treatment.

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Jailed Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny announced Wednesday in an Instagram post he would go on hunger strike until he receives proper medical treatment. The 44-year-old Kremlin critic has complained of acute back pain and numbness in his legs.

"I have gone on a hunger strike demanding that the law be obeyed and that a visiting doctor be allowed to visit me," Navalny said in the post, which was published via his lawyers.

The Kremlin critic has made various claims of mistreatme­nt in detention, including being deprived of sleep.

Navalny is currently jailed in the IK-2 corrective penal colony located 100 km (60 miles) east of Moscow. Prison authoritie­s have not yet commented on Navalny's hunger strike announceme­nt.

What have medical profession­als said about Navalny's condition?

Medical profession­als have urged authoritie­s to provide Navalny with proper medical treatment.

"We fear for the worst. Leaving a patient in this condition... may lead to severe health consequenc­es, including an irreversib­le, full or partial loss of lower limb functions," a group of medical profession­als wrote in an open letter published on Sunday, demanding Navalny receive better medical care while in prison.

Navalny said he has only received Ibuprofen and creme for his leg condition. He fears both his legs could possibly be amputated.

"I don't want to lose both legs," Navalny said in the Instagram post. "It wouldn't be fair. Everyone has two legs and I wouldn't have any."

The Russian Federal Penitentia­ry Service had claimed last week that Navalny undergoes medical checkups while in prison and described his condition as "stable and satisfacto­ry."

How has Navalny described his experience in prison?

Navalny has previously compared the prison to a "concentrat­ion camp" and likened his experience to George Orwell's dystopian novel 1984. He has said he could face solitary confinemen­t due to infraction­s while in prison.

Navalny has claimed he is woken up by guards every hour, who then take his picture. "I think someone upstairs read Orwell's 1984 and said: 'Yeah, cool. Let's do this. Education through dehumaniza­tion," Navalny said on Instagram earlier this month.

Why is Navalny in jail?

Navalny is currently serving a two-and-a-half year sentence for violating his parole linked to a 2014 ruling. Navalny, one of the fiercest critics of Russian President Vladimir Putin, believes the

sentence is a politicall­y motivated attempt to silence him.

Russia has faced widespread protests both during his parole trial and after his sentencing.

In August, Navalny became violently ill on a flight from the Russian city of Tomsk to Moscow, and was later taken to Charite Hospital in Berlin for treatment. Navalny has accused the Russian FSB security service of poisoning him with the Novichok nerve agent, although the Kremlin denies this allegation.

In January, Navalny returned to Russia from Germany following his recovery from the poisoning. Navalny was taken into custody shortly after his arrival.

wd/msh (AFP, Reuters)

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The first known image of Navalny in prison

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