Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Russia suspends activities of Alexei Navalny's campaign groups

Groups linked to Alexei Navalny's anti-corruption campaign have been banned from carrying out vital activities. Prosecutor­s are attempting to classify the network as "extremist."

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A Russian court ordered on Monday that all regional Anti-Corruption Foundation campaign groups, linked to jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, cease their activities, a lawyer for the group said.

The court decision follows a request by prosecutor­s to label Navalny's network of groups as "extremist."

Navalny ally Leonid Volkov said that the ruling forbids the foundation from publishing anything online, taking part in elections and organizing protests. Regional offices later said they had stopped posting informatio­n online following the ruling.

The Moscow City Court confirmed that the activities of the regional network were suspended. However, it said a final court ruling on whether to definitive­ly class the group as extremist was still due.

Germany has condemned the move to suspend the foundation's activities.

Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert said "using the instrument­s of fighting terror against politicall­y undesirabl­e opinions is in no way compatible with the principles of the rule of law."

Contentiou­s imprisonme­nt

Navalny, one of Russian President Vladimir Putin's most outspoken critics, is currently being held at a prison camp northeast of Moscow.

Navalny was arrested in January upon his return from Germany, where he had been convalesci­ng for five months after being poisoned by a nerve agent. He blames the poisoning on the Kremlin, but government officials have denied responsibi­lity.

He was sentenced to imprisonme­nt at the penal camp in early February for violating parole requiremen­ts related to an earlier suspended sentence over 2014 embezzleme­nt charges. He could not meet the terms of the sentence, under which he was meant to show up for regular appointmen­ts with the Russian prison service, because of his stay in Germany.

He says the embezzleme­nt charges were politicall­y motivated.

The opposition politician ended a three-week hunger strike last week after doctors warned him that continuing it would be life-threatenin­g.

Why could the foundation be designated 'extremist'?

Prosecutor­s on Friday said the foundation was "engaged in creating conditions for the destabiliz­ation of the social and sociopolit­ical situation."

They accused the network of attempting to change "the foundation­s of the constituti­onal order" and called its activities "undesirabl­e."

There are currently 33 organizati­ons listed as being extremist in Russia. They include "Islamic State," al-Qaida and the Jehovah's Witnesses.

Their activities are banned in Russia and participat­ion in them can result in long prison terms.

 ??  ?? Navalny has been held in a hospital in this penal colony in Vladimir
Navalny has been held in a hospital in this penal colony in Vladimir

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