The Korea Times

Navalny’s widow calls for election day gatherings to protest Putin

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The widow of Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who died in an Arctic prison three weeks ago, called on his supporters on Wednesday to join a protest of this month’s presidenti­al election that Navalny devised shortly before his still-unexplaine­d death.

Yulia Navalnaya asked Russians opposed to President Vladimir Putin to get in line at voting stations on March 17, the last and main day of voting.

Putin is certain to win a fifth term in office, potentiall­y extending his rule to 2030, in the election that includes only token opponents.

Navalnaya acknowledg­ed that in a video message on X, formerly Twitter, saying “Putin will imagine any result that he likes, even 80, even 180 percent.”

But the gathering “will help millions of people see like-minded people and realize that we are not alone, we are surrounded by people who are also against war, against corruption and against lawlessnes­s,” she said.

“We need to use election day to show that we exist and there are many of us, we are actual, living, real people and we are against Putin. … What to do next is up to you. You can vote for any candidate except Putin. You could ruin your ballot,” Navalnaya said.

Navalny had floated the noontime concept on Feb. 1, saying it was a “completely legal and safe” way to protest and that authoritie­s would have no way of countering it. Mass protest actions in Russia have become effectivel­y impossible under Putin’s intensifyi­ng crackdown on dissent and criticism in recent years.

Navalny was reported dead on Feb. 16. Authoritie­s said that he became ill after a walk at his prison colony, but have otherwise given no details. Navalny had been imprisoned since returning to Moscow in early 2021 from Germany, where had been recuperati­ng from nerve-agent poisoning that he blamed on the Kremlin. (AP)

“If they would kill me it

changes nothing”

PARIS (AFP) — Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition leader who died in prison last month, predicted in previously unpublishe­d testimony in 2020 and released on Wednesday that his death would change “nothing” and other people would stand in his place.

“If they would kill me it changes nothing,” Navalny told Jacques Maire, then a member of the Parliament­ary Assembly of the Council of Europe, in December 2020, speaking in English.

In the testimony released by French daily Liberation and broadcaste­r LCI, Navalny said his team knew what to do without him, although he admitted things would be more “difficult.”

“There are other people who are ready to stand [in] my place,” he said.

“There are millions of people who don’t want to live in a country where the whole power is just in one [man’s] hands,” he added. “It’s not about me. It’s about people who I represent or [am] trying to represent.” He also said the Kremlin had “never” tried to negotiate with him, adding that the Russian authoritie­s considered him to be “radical.”

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