Bangkok Post

Replica of Navalny’s cell set up in Paris

- ANNA SMOLCHENKO

A small concrete box marked with the word SHIZO (punishment cell in Russian) in giant red letters sits incongruou­sly next to a 13th-century church just behind the Louvre museum in Paris.

The grey box is a mock-up of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny’s punishment prison cell that his team unveiled in the French capital on Tuesday.

The top enemy of Russian President Vladimir Putin is being guarded so closely that his team said they still did not know if the 46-year-old was aware a film about him got an Oscar.

Martine Fuguet, one of the visitors, said Navalny was being kept “in a cage like an animal”.

Vsevolod Tlelov, an opposition activist who fled Russia last year, said the installati­on represente­d “a different universe”. “This is the life we don’t deserve.”

Navalny is serving a nine-year sentence on embezzleme­nt and other charges that his supporters see as a punishment for him challengin­g the Kremlin.

His team set up the replica of his cell — “a prison inside a prison” — in Paris to raise awareness of the dire conditions he’s held in. The installati­on mirrors a punishment cell where Navalny has spent more than 100 days over the past six months.

Inside the dimly lit box is a little sink, a toilet on the ground and a simple bed, which is folded away during the day.

Supporters scribbled messages of support on the outer side of the box including “Navalny out, Putin in!”.

Navalny’s spokeswoma­n Kira Yarmysh said it was not clear if Russia’s top opposition figure knew that a film examining his poisoning had won the Oscar for best documentar­y feature on Sunday.

“I think he knows,” Yarmysh said on the sidelines of the ceremony.

One of his lawyers was able to tell him the news during a recent court hearing, she added.

“We know that he had heard something,” she said.

Navalny told the lawyer “he was grateful”, Yarmysh added.

She said maintainin­g contact with Navalny was hard, adding he was being denied medical treatment.

Navalny was poisoned with Novichok, a Soviet-made nerve agent, in 2020. He barely survived, and accused Putin of being behind the attack.

Ivan Zhdanov, head of Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Fund, said it was important to raise awareness of the “monstrous” conditions Navalny was being held in.

“If Alexei becomes free, Putin will not be in power,” he added.

The installati­on arrived from Germany and will remain in Paris for two weeks. It is open to the public day and night.

 ?? ?? The mockup of Alexei Navalny’s punishment cell in Paris.
The mockup of Alexei Navalny’s punishment cell in Paris.
 ?? ?? Daniel Roher and the team of
Navalny with their Oscar.
Daniel Roher and the team of Navalny with their Oscar.

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