National Post

Rights lawyer target of probe

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MOSCOW • Russia has opened a criminal investigat­ion against one of the country’s top human rights lawyers who is defending jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny’s Anti-corruption Foundation (FBK) in an extremism case.

Security forces searched and briefly detained Ivan Pavlov on Friday before bringing him in for questionin­g again.

Pavlov, 50, is well known inside Russia for taking on high-profile and often politicall­y sensitive cases in which he represents people accused by the Russian state of everything from treason to espionage.

The investigat­ion into him follows mounting official pressure on the FBK, a Navalny-linked organizati­on that has produced a slew of high-profile and sometimes embarrassi­ng investigat­ions into official corruption. Some of the targets of its exposés have sued it and disputed its findings.

It comes at a time when Navalny’s movement and network of political campaign offices across Russia is under unpreceden­ted pressure designed to end its activities.

In another setback for Navalny’s team, Russia’s financial monitoring agency said on Friday it had added his network of campaign offices to a list of organizati­ons involved in “terrorism and extremism.”

“I was interrogat­ed as a suspect,” Pavlov told reporters outside a hotel in Moscow. He walked out unguarded and headed to another interrogat­ion with Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee.

Pavlov said he had been accused of disclosing classified informatio­n relating to an ongoing investigat­ion against one of his clients, former journalist Ivan Safronov.

The Investigat­ive Committee declined to comment.

A court later prohibited him from using the internet or a phone.

Pavlov was due to lead a legal team representi­ng the FBK in a court hearing considerin­g a request from the Moscow prosecutor to declare the group an extremist organizati­on. The main hearing is scheduled for May 17.

The offence Pavlov is accused of is punishable by up to three months in jail, Pavlov’s legal team said.

“Of course, this is an element of pressure because if he’s found guilty of committing a deliberate crime he would be deprived of his lawyer status and therefore would not be able to continue his profession­al activity,” said Dmitry Katchev, one of Safronov’s lawyers.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said: “We don’t have any informatio­n, we don’t know the reason for the arrest and how it happened, what this lawyer is accused of.”

Russian security forces also raided Pavlov’s wife home and the office of his legal team in St. Petersburg, his colleagues said on social media.

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