Daily Nation Newspaper

ALEXEI NAVALNY’S WIDOW YULIA FACES DAUNTING CHALLENGE IN RUSSIA

- – BBC.

LONDON - For years, Yulia Navalnaya was a near-constant presence by her husband’s side. At political protests and court hearings she would be there, often holding his hand.

In 2020 when Alexei Navalny was poisoned with a nerve agent, it was Yulia who pushed for clearance to fly him abroad for life-saving treatment.

And now he has died alone and far from her in an Arctic prison.

She blames Russian President Vladimir Putin for that and is calling on Russians to stand beside her now in fighting him.

The video statement Yulia Navalnaya posted online on Monday was a deliberate, and dramatic, step into the political spotlight. Her love for her husband is so strong, and her grief still so raw, that the recording is painful to watch in parts.

But it is very compelling. Navalny’s widow describes herself as being torn in two, her heart broken. But it’s her fury that’s driving her to continue her husband’s cause.

She says she wants to realise his “beautiful Russia of the future,” so that his “unthinkabl­e” death won’t have been in vain.

For some Russians who oppose President Putin, and are very despondent right now, the speech will have been uplifting.

Until this moment, Yulia Navalnaya was reserved and distant. But the video reveals her to be a woman of enormous inner strength.

Her loss - and her love lend her clear moral authority and she is engaging.

Strong women

There is precedent for strong women stepping in for absent men.

It happened most notably in neighbouri­ng Belarus, where the authoritar­ian Alexander Lukashenko so underestim­ated Svetlana Tikhanovsk­aya, he allowed her to register for the 2020 presidenti­al campaign when her husband Sergei Tikhanovsk­y was arrested.

That sexism nearly cost Lukashenko his exceedingl­y long grip on power. When he declared a landslide victory, Ms Tikhanovsk­aya brought huge crowds on to the street shouting about a rigged vote.

She had to flee abroad after a warning from the KGB and now acts as a “president” in exile.

Evgenia Kara-Murza has also taken on a global role.

When her husband was poisoned in Moscow in 2015 and 2017, Evgenia fought to stay by his side in hospital, guarding him “like a dog.”

At the time, Vladimir Kara-Murza was campaignin­g for Western leaders to tighten sanctions on Mr Putin’s people.

Then in 2022, he was arrested for condemning Russian war crimes in Ukraine and convicted of treason.

Evgenia, a translator by profession, now spends most of her time continuing her husband’s campaign for sanctions - as well as calling for his freedom - in Western capitals.

Crushing opposition could

Yulia Navalnaya take on a similar role.

She’s already addressed EU foreign ministers, who issued a statement of “outrage” at Navalny’s death. They declared that the “ultimate responsibi­lity” lay with Putin and promised “further costs,” as yet unspecifie­d.

But leading opposition forces within Russia is harder to see.

Alexei Navalny (centre) and Yulia (right) at a march held in memory of killed Kremlin critic

Boris Nemtsov in Moscow on February 29, 2020.

Yulia Navalnaya is abroad, for a start. As she’s just accused Putin of murdering her husband, a trip back to Moscow as an activist would be highly risky.

Inside Russia, Navalny’s political organisati­on has been banned as “extremist,” on a par with the Islamic State group and al-Qaeda.

Just before the organisati­on was banned in 2021, Navalny’s team called a protest which they pitched as the “final wwwbattle.” The cause was strong. The police turnout was massive.

But the protester count was less impressive. Since then, the pressure on all opposition has intensifie­d.

Navalny’s activists are either in prison, like he was, or they’ve fled into exile to avoid being arrested.

Vladimir Putin has spent the past two decades in power systematic­ally crushing all opposition.

There’s nothing much left for Navalnaya to lead.

The piles of flowers at memorials to Navalny all over Russia show that many people do want change.

Each time the tributes are removed by men in black hoods, people bring more flowers. It’s an act of quiet and peaceful resistance.

It’s these Russians Navalny’s widow addresses with her video calling on people to unite into a fist and “punch hard” at the Putin regime.

But their fear, and sense of powerlessn­ess, feel too strong.

After all, it was Alexei Navalny who punched hardest of all during his lifetime and he paid a huge price for that.

 ?? KUDRYAVTSE­V / AFP ?? File Photo - Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, his wife Yulia, opposition politician Lyubov Sobol and other demonstrat­ors march in memory of murdered Kremlin critic Boris Nemtsov in downtown Moscow on February 29, 2020. - Photo by Kirill
KUDRYAVTSE­V / AFP File Photo - Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, his wife Yulia, opposition politician Lyubov Sobol and other demonstrat­ors march in memory of murdered Kremlin critic Boris Nemtsov in downtown Moscow on February 29, 2020. - Photo by Kirill

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