Muscat Daily

Kremlin critic Navalny decries ‘mockery of justice’ at hearing in makeshift court

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Moscow, Russia - Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny said on Monday he was facing a ‘mockery of justice’ as police in Moscow organised a makeshift court hearing a day after his dramatic airport arrest.

With calls growing in the West for Navalny’s release, he was brought into a courtroom set up at the police station in Khimki on the outskirts of Moscow where he was taken following his detention on Sunday night.

Aides said Navalny, who returned to Russia for the first time since being poisoned with a nerve agent in August, was denied access to his lawyers and notified at the last minute of the hearing. His team released a video of an incredulou­s Navalny at the hearing.

“I’ve seen a lot of mockery of justice... but they have ripped up and thrown away [Russia’s criminal code],” Navalny said.

“This is impossible. It’s ultimate lawlessnes­s.”

Police seized the 44 year old, the most prominent opponent of President Vladimir Putin, at a border control post at Moscow’s Sheremetye­vo airport less than an hour after he returned to Russia, in defiance of warnings he would be arrested.

Russia’s FSIN prison service said it had detained Navalny for violating the terms of a suspended sentence he was given in 2014, on fraud charges he says were politicall­y motivated.

Navalny is also facing potential new criminal charges under a probe launched late last year by Russian investigat­ors who say he misappropr­iated over US$4mn worth of donations.

Navalny emerged a decade ago as the leading critic of the Kremlin, with his Anti-Corruption Foundation publishing antigraft investigat­ions that often reveal the lavish lifestyles of the Russian elite.

He has repeatedly led largescale street protests against Putin, most recently in the summer of 2019, and was gearing up for another challenge to authoritie­s during elections to the lower house State Duma in September.

He was evacuated to Germany after falling violently ill on a flight over Siberia in August from what Western experts eventually concluded was a poisoning with Soviet-designed nerve agent Novichok. Navalny accused Putin of ordering the attack, a claim the Kremlin vehemently denies. Russian police did not open an investigat­ion citing lack of evidence.

 ?? ( AFP) ?? Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and his wife Yulia at the passport control point at the Sheremetye­vo Internatio­nal Airport, in Moscow on Sunday
( AFP) Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny and his wife Yulia at the passport control point at the Sheremetye­vo Internatio­nal Airport, in Moscow on Sunday

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