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Attacks don’t stop Russian opposition leader

- By Sabra Ayres Special to Los Angeles Times

NEW YORK — Hours after Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was attacked recently outside his Moscow office with a green-colored antiseptic, he sat in his studio to record a video on his YouTube channel, Navalny Live.

The Kremlin critic’s face, neck and hands were stained bright green. His left eye was encircled in red and bloodshot. The right eye was swollen shut.

“Today, you have probably noticed that I’m not looking as I normally do,” Navalny said.

Upbeat and defiant, he described what happened.

On April 27, Navalny was leaving his Anti-Corruption Foundation office when an assailant splashed a commonly used antiseptic called zelyonka in his face.

It wasn’t the first time Navalny had been doused in zelyonka. A month before that attack, Navalny, who says he will run against Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2018, was sprayed in the face with the green liquid while on a campaign stop in the Siberian city of Barnaul.

That time, the man whose Anti-Corruption Foundation has drawn the Kremlin’s ire for its investigat­ions into high-level Russian government figures, including Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, spun the green dye to his advantage. He painted his whole face green and urged his supporters to to march against what he claims is Kremlinorc­hestrated corruption.

His supporters followed his lead, posting photos of themselves painted green on social media.

It became a symbol of the Russian opposition movement protesting corruption.

Navalny next rallied support for anti-corruption mass protests that saw tens of thousands of demonstrat­ors turn out in 82 cities across Russia on March 26. Thousands were arrested at the protests, including Navalny. The protests were the largest in Russia since 2012, when there were mass demonstrat­ions after parliament­ary elections.

But in the aftermath of the April 27 attack, Navalny is taking a more serious tone. This time, chemical burns cost him 80 percent of his sight in his right eye, he said on his Facebook page. His doctors think that the severity of his injury indicates that some other, more toxic substance must have been mixed in with the green antiseptic, he said.

“So far this is not irreversib­le,” he wrote on Facebook.

His treatments will continue, and there is hope his sight will return, he said.

Navalny blamed the attack on Kremlin associates and said he would file a complaint against the Moscow police for not properly investigat­ing his attack.

Navalny supporters said they had used a video of the attack shown on a stateowned TV report and social media to identify two of the suspected assailants.

One has close ties to a Russian parliament member and the other is a member of a radical, pro-Kremlin group called the SouthEast Russia Block, the activists said.

Despite their sleuthing, human rights activists said it’s unlikely Navalny’s attack will be solved. More serious attacks in the past have gone unsolved.

“They do it because they know they are living in a state of impunity, a state Putin has created,” said Vladimir Kara-Murza, an opposition politician and vice chairman of Open Russia, a pro-democracy group.

Kara-Murza was a close associate of slain opposition leader Boris Nemtsov. He said he has survived two poisoning attempts, the last one in February, when he suffered from acute organ failure.

“Zelyonka is nothing when they know that they can kill a man in front of the Kremlin or poison another,” he said, speaking during a visit to New York.

Nemtsov, a former deputy prime minister, was shot and killed outside the Kremlin wall in 2015. Five men associated with the president of Chechnya are standing trial in that case, but attorneys for Nemtsov’s family have expressed doubt that they are the real organizers of the killing.

 ?? EVGENY FELDMAN ?? Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny shows the result of unknown attackers dousing him with green antiseptic.
EVGENY FELDMAN Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny shows the result of unknown attackers dousing him with green antiseptic.

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