Deccan Chronicle

Navalny health improves: Aide

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20: Jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has recovered after he ended a 24-day hunger strike last month demanding adequate medical treatment, a top aide and the head of Russia’s prison service said Thursday.

Navalny, President Vladimir Putin’s best known domestic critic, is serving two-and-a-half years in a penal colony outside Moscow on old fraud charges he says are politicall­y motivated. The 44-year-old opposition figure went on hunger strike at the end of March demanding proper treatment behind bars for severe back pain and numbness in his limbs. He ended the protest on April

23 after receiving treatment at a civilian hospital.

His last public appearance was by video link in court during an appeal hearing at the end of April, where he appeared thin and said he had started eating a couple spoonfuls of porridge a day.

On Thursday, news agency TASS quoted the head of Russia’s Federal Prison Service, Alexander Kalashniko­v, as saying that Navalny “has recovered, more or less”.

“His weight is already up to 82 kilograms (180 pounds), I think,” Kalashniko­v told journalist­s.

The prisons chief, who has been sanctioned both by the US and the EU over the treatment of Navalny, added that the Kremlin critic is “eating normally”. The director of Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK), Ivan Zhdanov, confirmed his health was improving.

“His condition is now more or less normal. The recovery process is indeed underway,” Zhdanov said on Ekho Moskvy radio.

Navalny’s allies said that he weighed 93 kilograms (205 pounds) when he arrived in prison in

February, but that the figure had already fallen to

85 kilograms (187 pounds) by the time he launched his hunger strike.

His wife Yulia in midApril said that his weight was down to 76 kilograms

(167 pounds). The update on Navalny’s health comes as Russia moves to outlaw his movement.

Next month a court will begin hearing whether to add his network of regional offices and the FBK to a list of “terrorist and extremist” organisati­ons.

Russia’s lower house of parliament on Tuesday approved legislatio­n in a first reading that would ban members of “extremist” organisati­ons from becoming lawmakers.

THE 44-YEAR-OLD opposition figure went on hunger strike at the end of March demanding proper treatment behind bars for back pain and numbness in his limbs.

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