The Herald (South Africa)

Jailed Kremlin critic Navalny’s movement is on the ropes

- Andrew Osborn, Anton Zverev and Tom Balmforth

He has been poisoned, jailed and his close aides are either being prosecuted or have fled abroad.

His anti-Kremlin opposition movement is now also likely to soon be outlawed as extremist.

Yet Alexei Navalny and his supporters continue to work on ways to remain a thorn in President Vladimir Putin’s side, even as one of his most important financial backers says the movement in its current form is finished and will take time to rebound.

In the eyes of the Kremlin, the only half-meaningful political weapon the Navalny camp has left is its campaign for tactical, or what it calls “smart” voting against the ruling United Russia party in a parliament­ary election in September.

Navalny’s supporters are set to be barred from that election via a court case, due to unfold later this month, and planned legislatio­n unveiled on the parliament­ary website on Tuesday that would ban “extremists” from running for office.

A court, meeting in secret, is considerin­g a request from Moscow prosecutor­s to have Navalny’s network designated “extremist” for allegedly plotting a revolution, state media have reported.

Russia’s financial monitoring agency has already added the network to a list on its website of groups involved in “terrorism and extremism”.

In response, Navalny’s movement has redoubled its call for sympathise­rs to vote for other opposition parties in September, however unpalatabl­e they may consider them.

Abbas Gallyamov, a former Kremlin speech writer turned political analyst, said the Navalny camp’s smart voting strategy could mean an embarrassi­ng defeat for the Kremlin’s favoured candidates in many cities.

But a source close to the authoritie­s, who declined to be named, said it would just be an exercise in shuffling the same pack of Kremlin-controlled cards.

“The kind of parties and candidates that Navalny’s people will try to help are ... in the Kremlin’s pocket,” the source said.

“Everything will be all right (for us).”

The Kremlin and Putin say Russia’s election system is competitiv­e, that Navalny and his allies are part of a US-backed effort to destabilis­e Russia, and that the Russian leader, who has been in power as president or prime minister since 1999, remains the most popular politician by far.

The Kremlin did not immediatel­y respond to a request to comment on whether it considered “smart” voting a threat and had influence over opposition parties that will run for parliament.

A third source close to the Kremlin described the Navalny camp’s strategy as an irritant capable of causing some political damage but nothing that could seriously harm the ruling party’s standing.

Leonid Volkov, a Navalny ally, told followers on Facebook on April 29 the expected court ruling meant it was no longer safe to operate regional campaign headquarte­rs, which are used to stage protests which have mostly been crushed with force.

Announcing their official disbanding, he said some would close but that others would try to make it on their own as independen­t structures by cutting ties.

If Navalny’s network is declared extremist, the law states that group organisers could face jail terms of up to 10 years, activists could be held criminally liable and anyone making donations could be jailed for up to eight years.

Investigat­ions by his FBK anti-corruption foundation, some of which have generated tens of millions of YouTube views, are continuing to be produced outside Russia, with the latest, about state media organisati­on RT, issued on April 28.

Prosecutor­s want to designate the FBK as extremist too.

Navalny’s activities are bankrolled by crowdfundi­ng and he has several major donors, including Boris Zimin, who last year paid for Navalny to be evacuated to Germany from Russia after he was poisoned with what doctors said was a nerve agent.

Zimin told Reuters he did not know whether he would still donate funds.

“The state has enough measures at its disposal to stop any activity. So no doubt the authoritie­s will stop the FBK in its current ‘version’,” he said. “But I trust this is not the end of the day.”

Volkov cast the latest legal move against Navalny’s movement as evidence the Kremlin was scared.

“You’ve got no answer against smart voting idiots,” he wrote on Twitter on May 4.

Volkov told Reuters he would comment on the movement’s prospects at a later date.

 ?? Picture: ANTON VAGANOV/REUTERS ?? DAYS NUMBERED?: A police officer stands next to a car in front of a graffiti depicting Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The graffiti reads: “The hero of the new age”.
Picture: ANTON VAGANOV/REUTERS DAYS NUMBERED?: A police officer stands next to a car in front of a graffiti depicting Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The graffiti reads: “The hero of the new age”.
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