The Jerusalem Post

The death of Navalny

It must be a wake-up call for all of us

- • By PAULA KWESKIN The writer is a human rights lawyer and filmmaker. She is the founder and director of The 49%, a nonprofit women’s rights organizati­on.

After her husband, Russian opposition activist Alexei Navalny, died in prison, Yulia Navalnaya said that she was now half-dead. Yet she pledged this week to continue his brave work.

But she needs all of us around the world to help her. That is the only way that Navalnaya can accomplish what her husband did not finish during his lifetime. His death in prison, ultimately at the hands of Putin, must be a wake-up call for the rest of the world.

I never had the chance to meet Navalny, but hearing of his death reminded me of when I, as a teenager, met another dissident, Harry Wu. While there have been questions about Wu’s legacy, which must be addressed, the encounter I had at the age of 15 at a local classroom lecture in my hometown of Charlotte, North Carolina, changed the course of my life.

After criticizin­g the Chinese totalitari­an government, Wu was imprisoned in a Chinese labor camp for 19 years. He was nearly starved to death and experience­d frequent beatings. After describing to the audience his time in solitary confinemen­t, he pointed to a world map. He was soft-spoken but unwavering in his message: Our lives are deeply affected by the circumstan­ces of our birth. A child born in the US would enjoy democracy and freedom. A child born in China was destined for limitation and oppression.

At that moment, astounded by such stories of bravery and struck by how ordinary individual­s can take bold and extraordin­ary action, I committed myself to a career in human rights and advocacy. I understood that being born in the US gave me unlimited freedom and the opportunit­y to help others who were destined to suffer or be silenced.

In today’s world, Navalny was one of a network of human rights advocates and dissidents who called out tyranny and oppression. They are heroes among us, everyday individual­s whose decisions to stand up against totalitari­anism changed their lives and the lives of their communitie­s. We can hope that they will change the world order as well, but they are relying on the rest of us to help achieve

their mission, to support them, to get their messages out, and to take any action we can to reflect their values and mission.

Many of these global heroes live in countries allied with Russia, which employ the same totalitari­an tactics. There is a spiderweb of human rights activists living and dying in countries whose despotism threatens global stability. These nations despise individual freedoms and are desperate to retain – and expand – their influence.

Russia’s strongest allies – Iran (and its proxies, including Hamas and Hezbollah), North Korea, Belarus, and China – also among the countries with the worst human rights records. We must not forget that in each of these countries, there is a Navalny who is demanding our consciousn­ess and support, risking their lives.

In Iran, Nobel Prize winner Narges Mohammadi is just one of hundreds of human rights defenders languishin­g in prison. Still, she manages to smuggle her writings and messages beyond the walls of Evin Prison, demanding “democracy, freedom, and equality” and an end to gender apartheid.

Timothy Cho, a North Korean defector and human rights activist, was imprisoned and beaten by the North Korean regime. He miraculous­ly escaped and advocates for democracy, freedom of expression, and justice in North Korea.

Sviatlana Tsikhanous­kaya is a Belarussia­n opposition leader and human rights activist. By many accounts, she won

the 2020 presidenti­al election against authoritar­ian dictator Alexander Lukashenko, who remains in office. She has warned, “Dictatorsh­ip is a cancer; it will spread.”

In May 2023, Chinese activist Yang Maodong was sentenced to eight years in prison for criticizin­g the Communist Party. Maodong said that all his activities aim for “China to fully realize authentic freedom, democracy, human rights, and the rule of law.” Following a hunger strike in prison, colleagues are deeply concerned about his health.

Dictators in Iran, North Korea, Belarus, and China systematic­ally arrest and murder detractors as a way to maintain their tyrannical hold. Perhaps they don’t realize that their oppression only fuels dissent. And this is where the rest of the world can play a role. Strangling human rights doesn’t stamp out freedom but, rather, can give it oxygen as long as there are other brave individual­s willing to support these activists.

They cannot do it alone. But in 2024, can they count on global support?

WE ARE BECOMING too comfortabl­e with tyranny and dictatorsh­ips. Western appeasemen­t resulted in the deaths of over 600,000 Syrians at the hands of President Assad. The Houthis’ insurgency in Yemen created a humanitari­an crisis for over 20 million people, and now the terrorist group is blocking global trade routes. China enjoys warm or cool relationsh­ips with most of the

West while it systematic­ally persecutes its Muslim Uyghur population.

Chinese authoritie­s have implemente­d forced labor, surveillan­ce, and a program of unwanted sterilizat­ion, and they have unlawfully detained an estimated one million Uyghurs. Iran enjoys friendly relationsh­ips with many countries in Europe while it directs and finances the world’s worst terror organizati­ons, including Hamas and Hezbollah.

Navalny’s death and his wife’s commitment to carry on his work at great risk to her life must be a clarion call to galvanize human rights defenders and their supporters. There are actions that both ordinary citizens and leaders of large advocacy organizati­ons living in democracie­s can take: Amplify the voices of true human rights heroes, such as those named here. Many of them have organizati­ons and individual­s who support them abroad, and this support is critical.

Be very careful not to proliferat­e the messages of organizati­ons that support or apologize for totalitari­an regimes in power. As former US House speaker Nancy Pelosi recently asserted, protesters in the United States expressing solidarity with Hamas and calling for a ceasefire may be linked to Putin.

Support organizati­ons that are looking to promote democratic values; do not be ashamed of promoting democracy and being proud of democracy. All human rights defenders living under totalitari­an regimes are risking their lives to bring rule of law, democracy, and freedom of expression to their nations. We must value and safeguard these cornerston­es.

We must no longer tolerate the brutality of dictators. We must not be apologetic in our mission to strengthen democracy and demand freedoms for everyone. Democracy is not a dirty word; it is the word whispered on the breath of every human rights activist from Tehran to Pyongyang, in Shanghai and Minsk. It is the value we must uphold and celebrate – for their sakes and for ours.

 ?? (The White House/Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT Joe Biden meets with Yulia Navalnaya, the wife of Alexei Navalny, in San Francisco, last Thursday, following Alexei’s death in a prison camp.
(The White House/Reuters) US PRESIDENT Joe Biden meets with Yulia Navalnaya, the wife of Alexei Navalny, in San Francisco, last Thursday, following Alexei’s death in a prison camp.

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