Deccan Chronicle

EU debates Navalny arrest

Calls for quick release of protesters, permission to dissent

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Brussels, Jan. 25: European Union foreign ministers on Monday debated the 27-nation bloc’s response to the arrest of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and a weekend police crackdown that saw thousands taken into custody during protests in support of President Vladimir Putin’s most wellknown critic.

“This wave of detention is something that worries us a lot, as well as the detention of Mr Navalny,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said as he arrived to chair the ministeria­l meeting in Brussels.

More than 3,500 people were reportedly taken into custody during the nationwide protests. German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said that “under the Russian constituti­on, everyone in Russia has the right to express their opinion and to demonstrat­e. That must be possible. The principles of the rule of law must apply there, too — Russia has always committed itself to that.” He and other ministers called for the immediate release of the protesters.

Navalny was arrested earlier this month when he returned to Moscow

after spending months in Germany recovering from an attack in Russia with what experts have said was the nerve agent Novichok. In October, the EU imposed sanctions on six Russian officials and a state research institute over Navalny’s poisoning, but there is little appetite to take new measures immediatel­y. Borrell, the EU’s top

diplomat, is also planning a trip to Moscow and it’s unclear what impact events will have on that visit.

On Sunday, French Foreign Minister JeanYves Le Drian expressed concern about what he called Russia’s “authoritar­ian drift. He told FranceInte­r radio that “all light must be shed” on Navalny’s poisoning.

“This was an assassinat­ion attempt,” Le Drian said. The protests attracted thousands of people in major Russian cities, including an estimated 15,000 in Moscow. As they unfolded, the US embassy spokeswoma­n in the city, Rebecca Ross, said on Twitter that the United States “supports the right of all people to peaceful protest, freedom

of expression. Steps being taken by Russian authoritie­s are suppressin­g those rights.”

The embassy also tweeted a State Department statement calling for Navalny’s release. Putin’s spokesman said the statements interfered in the country’s domestic affairs and encouraged Russians to break the law. —

 ?? AP ?? (From left) Croatia Foreign Affairs minister of Gordan Grlic Radman speaks to his German counterpar­t Heiko Maas, Luxembourg counterpar­t Jean Asselborn and Romanian counterpar­t Bogdan Aurescu, during a EU Foreign Affairs Ministers meeting at the European Council building in Brussels on Monday. —
AP (From left) Croatia Foreign Affairs minister of Gordan Grlic Radman speaks to his German counterpar­t Heiko Maas, Luxembourg counterpar­t Jean Asselborn and Romanian counterpar­t Bogdan Aurescu, during a EU Foreign Affairs Ministers meeting at the European Council building in Brussels on Monday. —

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