The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

The man who won’t vanish: Putin’s greatest critic shaping national polls from inside Russian prison

- BY DR BEN NOBLE Lecturer in Russian Politics at University College London

Today the polls close in Russia’s national parliament­ary elections and the Kremlin is nervous.

Alexei Navalny, the 45-year-old Russian lawyer and anti-corruption activist, is Vladimir Putin’s most vocal critic in Russia. But he is behind bars.

Navalny returned to Russia in January this year, following recovery in Germany from poisoning. He fell ill during a flight from Tomsk, Siberia, on August 20 last year, leading to an emergency landing in Omsk. An investigat­ion by Bellingcat and partners argued that Navalny had been targeted by an assassinat­ion squad from Russia’s Federal Security Service – the FSB – that had planted the nerve agent Novichok on the inside of his underpants. That Navalny survived the poisoning is nothing short of miraculous – and likely due to medical evacuation to the Charité Hospital in Berlin.

After arriving in Moscow in January, Navalny was detained at passport control and swiftly handed a custodial sentence in relation to a 2014 conviction that the European Court of Human Rights ruled in 2017 was “arbitrary and manifestly unreasonab­le”. The Kremlin had clearly had enough of a figure who posed an ever-greater challenge, from trying to run against Putin in the 2018 presidenti­al election, to leading protests with chants of “Russia without Putin!”, to releasing an investigat­ion alleging the Russian president’s control of a luxury estate on the Black Sea – “Putin’s Palace”.

In a recent interview for The New York Times, Navalny painted a picture of life in Penal Colony No. 2 in Pokrov, about 100 kilometres from Moscow. Instead of physical violence and hard labour, inmates are subjected to what Navalny calls “psychologi­cal violence”. This includes being forced to watch hour upon hour of propaganda and state television.

Russian tabloid Komsomolsk­aya Pravda derided the country’s leading opposition figure for complainin­g about prison life that the newspaper portrayed as cushy. For Navalny, though, the goal of the penal authoritie­s is to use TV to numb prisoners’ minds – and to push them to snapping point. The prison administra­tion can then use any violent outbursts by inmates to keep them locked up even longer.

Outside of prison, Navalny’s team and his movement have faced an unpreceden­ted crackdown this year. With his organisati­ons – including the Anti-Corruption Foundation, responsibl­e for the “Putin’s Palace” investigat­ion – labelled “extremist” and dissolved, some of his closest associates and regional activists have left the country. Indeed, the speed with which Navalny’s infrastruc­ture was dismantled is breath-taking.

What explains this? The Kremlin has been rattled. Approval ratings for United Russia – the dominant proKremlin party – have been at their lowest level for years, with Russians angry at rising prices, corruption by officials, and deeply unpopular rises in retirement ages for men and women announced in 2018. And yet, the Kremlin wants to resecure a thumping majority of seats in the legislatur­e (the State Duma), so that it can dominate the law-making process – and project an image of strength and control.

Navalny and his team have other plans, however. Their Smart Voting project – a tactical voting scheme – aims to consolidat­e the vote of those who do not support United Russia but are likely split across different opposition parties. Navalny’s team selects the candidate they think is best positioned to challenge the authoritie­s’ pick in a particular geographic­al constituen­cy, recommendi­ng that voters unite in their support around this single candidate. This has been hard for some of the opposition to accept. With a

focus on who is best placed to challenge United Russia instead of candidates’ ideologica­l and policy positions, recommenda­tions very often include members of the “systemic” opposition – that is, those parties tolerated and co-opted by the Kremlin. Team Navalny’s thinking is that the primary focus needs to be on preventing United Russia’s success, even at the expense of other political preference­s. For the moment, at least.

For the many Russians who see no point in taking part in elections, and who are increasing­ly apathetic, the goal of Navalny’s project is to show that they can, in fact, make a difference – and that boycotting the elections makes it easier for United Russia to win. Smart Voting has spooked the Kremlin. And it shows: the Russian communicat­ions regulator, Roskomnadz­or, has blocked access to the project’s website. A Moscow court has ordered Google not to show results for Smart Voting in search engine results. And, in a move which Navalny’s supporters claim shows tech giants caving in to the Kremlin, the Smart Voting app disappeare­d from the Google and Apple app stores.

The authoritie­s are also using other tools to unlevel the electoral playing field. This “menu of manipulati­on” includes skewing media coverage to praise United Russia candidates and besmirch others, barring opposition candidates from running, and making one-off preelectio­n payments to key sections of the electorate that might be persuaded to back the authoritie­s. This is all ahead of the three days of voting. Past elections have also been marred on the day by more direct forms of electoral falsificat­ion, including ballot stuffing.

Alexei Navalny’s remaining channel to the outside world is through his lawyers. This has markedly reduced the opposition figure’s ability to communicat­e with his supporters. But it has not stopped things entirely. In a post on Instagram, he renewed his calls for people to follow Smart Voting recommenda­tions to frustrate United Russia’s plans for electoral victory.

However, it looks like the authoritie­s are intent on further blocking his voice. According to Navalny, meetings with his lawyers are being interrupte­d by guards in the prison colony. The possible reason according to one of Navalny’s lawyers, Vadim Kobzev? “Pre-election hysteria.”

Since being locked up, Navalny’s approval ratings have fallen – from 19% in January to 14% in June. For a figure demonised by state-aligned media as an agent of the West, these figures are impressive. But the reasons for the fall remain unclear. Have previous supporters lost hope in the promise of this leading opposition figure? Navalny’s current sentence is two-and-a-half years long, but he is facing other charges that could keep him imprisoned for longer. Or are people more afraid now to voice their support? Regardless of the answer, the Kremlin still sees Alexei Navalny as a threat – even behind bars. And that has profoundly shaped its preparatio­ns for these legislativ­e elections.

Dr Ben Noble is Lecturer in Russian Politics at University College London and an Associate Fellow of Chatham House. He is the co-author – with Jan Matti Dollbaum and Morvan Lallouet – of the book Navalny: Putin’s Nemesis, Russia’s Future?, published by Hurst

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President Vladimir Putin
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 ?? Picture Olga Maltseva/ Getty ?? A mural in St Petersburg declaring Alexei Navalny a ‘hero of a new time’ is painted over by Russian authoritie­s
Picture Olga Maltseva/ Getty A mural in St Petersburg declaring Alexei Navalny a ‘hero of a new time’ is painted over by Russian authoritie­s

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