The Guardian (USA)

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny condemns mass raids

- Shaun Walker

The Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny has called a wave of raids by Russian authoritie­s against his associates “probably the biggest coordinate­d searches in the country since 1938” – the final year of Joseph Stalin’s purges.

Investigat­ors launched simultaneo­us raids on Tuesday morning on offices used by Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK) and the homes of the foundation’s employees, less than a week after the group was officially declared a “foreign agent” by Russian authoritie­s.

In a statement, Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee said it was conducting searches at FBK offices in 30 locations across Russia. Security footage from the FBK’s Moscow headquarte­rs showed masked riot police entering the offices.

The police seized documents and electronic­s as part of an investigat­ion into alleged money laundering. The action follows similar raids on more than 200 locations last month, in what appears to be a concerted effort to shutter the work of the Kremlin’s most prominent critic.

Navalny, speaking to the Guardian aboard an Aeroflot flight from Moscow to New York on Sunday, said the allegation­s of money laundering were “plucked from thin air”, and the raids were really in revenge for the losses suffered by Kremlin allies in Moscow local elections last month.

“The tactical voting was a much more successful scheme than we thought it would be; it was a gamechange­r,” he said.

The electoral committee barred most opposition candidates from standing, prompting Navalny and his allies to create a tactical voting scheme to persuade disaffecte­d Muscovites to vote for anyone but the Kremlin candidate.

Lyubov Sobol, one of Navalny’s allies who was barred from the vote, on Tuesday wrote on Twitter: “Shameless bastards from the Kremlin are seeking revenge for ‘Smart Voting’ and trying to destroy a network of our offices”.

Navalny spent much of the summer in prison on charges of calling for street protests, and suffered a suspected poisoning attempt while in jail over the summer as protests rocked the capital.

His FBK has published a series of investigat­ions into corruption among members of president Vladimir Putin’s inner circle, which often garner millions of hits on YouTube. Branding the organisati­on a “foreign agent” appears to be the latest attempt to quash its activities.

“We’re still trying to work out what it means in practice,” said Navalny. The most problemati­c consequenc­e so far is that the foundation’s bank accounts, as well as the personal bank accounts of over 100 employees, have been frozen. “We have been getting lots more donations but all the money is frozen,” he said.

He said the accusation that the group had taken foreign money was based on a small donation from a mysterious donor in Spain made while the foundation’s account was already frozen. “We have been very careful about who we take money from. If it comes from abroad it’s impossible, because the bank just rejects it. But in this case it couldn’t be returned because the account was frozen,” he said.

Navalny said his team have been investigat­ing the mysterious Spanish donor, and so far has found no evidence that either the firm or the individual actually exist, leading him to believe it may have been a provocatio­n. “Knowing their work of late I wouldn’t be surprised if we end up finding that it was some kind of GRU firm,” he said, halfjoking­ly.

For several years, the Kremlin has struggled to deal with Navalny, mixing outright repression with banning him from the airwaves of state controlled television and attempting to marginalis­e him.

While nationwide opinion polls show he has limited political support, his anti-corruption investigat­ions are popular and inside the Kremlin he is regarded as the one opposition figure who could pose a serious threat. Navalny said it was hard to guess how far the Kremlin was willing to go in its attempts to shut down his foundation.

“I don’t really know what their game plan is going to be. Russia will become more and more like Belarus, but they can’t put everyone in jail. We have the support of the street. Suppose you’re Putin, what do you do? OK, you put me and 100 other people in jail, and then next day people will come out with our portraits,” he said.

 ??  ?? Alexei Navalny at a protest rally in Moscow last month. Photograph: Anadolu Agency via Getty Images
Alexei Navalny at a protest rally in Moscow last month. Photograph: Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

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