The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

The Navalny I knew was a man of optimism. The only way to break him was to kill him Nataliya Vasilyeva

Charming, principled Kremlin critic posed such a threat because he was the antithesis of Putin

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‘Nataliya, every time we meet you’re asking about the same thing: ‘What’s going to happen to Russia?’”

These were the words Alexei Navalny said to me during an interview at his office in Moscow in 2016, one of at least six I carried out with the opposition leader while he was still a free man.

Navalny was always the opposite of Vladimir Putin, the man he spent most of his life struggling against – witty, charming, and driven by a profound moral core.

Although my job was to remain impartial, his good nature often got the better of me.

I met Alexei almost 14 years ago, when he was using small holdings in several state-owned Russian companies to call for greater corporate transparen­cy. Here was the beginning of his career as a campaigner against the corruption that has flourished to extraordin­ary heights under Putin.

On a winter afternoon in 2010 he invited me, a young business reporter with the Associated Press in Moscow, to a one-room office over a busy Moscow highway. He had a modest law practice, and activism was a hobby.

As soon as we started to talk about abuses at the state-owned oil company Surgutneft­egaz, he leapt to the whiteboard and started to draw diagrams showing how much taxpayer money was being pilfered.

Navalny was passionate about what he was doing and sought to bring others along. He was upset when I had to decline an invitation to attend a court hearing he was due to attend shortly. Still, he waved goodbye to us from his window as we were leaving.

Less than two years later, Navalny was impossible to get hold of. By December 2011, he had emerged as a budding leader of the Russian opposition movement and was inundated with media requests.

Once on stage, his presence was magnetic. Dressed in layers of thermal underwear, I stood at a l square in Moscow that winter, along with some 200,000 others who had taken to the streets to protest against the rigging of the 2011 parliament­ary elections. Several speakers condemned Puin, then prime minister and nominally second-in-command, and urged a fresh vote. But it was only when Navalny, then 34, started to speak that the crowd transforme­d.

Refusing to wear a hat in -20C degrees, he roared: “I can see enough people to storm the Kremlin right now but we’re a peaceful people – we’re not going to do it right now but if these thieves and crooks keep lying to us and stealing from us, we will take back what’s ours!”

In retrospect, the months-long wave of protests was the tipping point for Russia – something that might have stopped its decline into autocracy.

Navalny refused to call for violence. Instead, he found himself struggling to fit into the sanitised political landscape constructe­d by the Kremlin.

While others stayed within the limits of acceptable opposition, he grew bolder. It became clear he was a real headache for Putin because, unlike the Russian president, he had a genuine following.

I remember his allies breaking down in tears when he was handcuffed and taken away at a court hearing in 2013, only to be released 24 hours later after tens of thousands blocked central streets in Moscow in protest.

That summer, Navalny ran for Moscow mayor and came second, an embarrassi­ng blow for the Kremlin. They never let him appear on the ballot again.

In early 2014, Putin launched a lightning operation to annex Crimea, while sending a clandestin­e Russian force into eastern Ukraine to foment separatist insurgency. In the year that followed, Navalny struggled to stay relevant as Putin’s revanchist policies and the Crimean annexation briefly won the hearts of the public. When I went to interview Navalny in spring 2015, he was under house arrest at his home on the outskirts of Moscow, in a drab and polluted neighbourh­ood that felt a world away from the de luxe lifestyles of the Russian elite.

When he opened the door, he apologised he couldn’t step outside: His tracking bracelet would go berserk if he crossed the threshold by even a foot. As a natural firebrand, Navalny was bored sitting at home all those weeks: at one point his wife, Yulia, came into their kitchen to joke about his restlessne­ss.

Soon, the euphoria over the bloodless annexation of the Crimean peninsula wore out, and Navalny reinvented himself. His team doubled down on investigat­ions into corruption and packed them into video clips on YouTube. One of them, an hour-long investigat­ion about Russia’s prime minister Dmitry Medvedev, garnered more than 46 million views and spurred a summer of opposition protests.

As a growing number of dissidents in Russia were being thrown in jail, some of them dying in in suspicious circumstan­ces, Navalny was steadfast. He kept on supporting a network of allies he built all over the country after the Kremlin barred him from running in the 2018 presidenti­al elections. During one of those trips in the

Russian regions he fell suddenly ill and almost died – he had been poisoned by FSB agents. As he was convalesci­ng in Germany, his allies warned him about returning to Russia.

But on a January afternoon in 2021 he boarded the plane and arrived in Moscow, only to be arrested at passport control.

Because he had sought treatment for poisoning in Germany, Navalny was put on trial for violating the terms of his parole – a typical piece of Kremlin thuggery. He stood in a glass defendant’s cage at a new court building in Moscow, projecting defiance and making heart signs for his wife.

That was the last time journalist­s, including myself, ever saw him.

In my interviews with Navalny over the years – at his office, at his flat, on the sidelines of filming a YouTube clip or on the campaign trail – I often asked him about his future and that of Russian democracy.

He maintained his good humour on those subjects because his beliefs were unwavering. Navalny believed that Russia was “no worse than other countries” and was not doomed to live in an autocracy. As for his own future, Navalny dismissed the risks, saying it was his choice to fight for “a wonderful Russia of the future” and that “sitting at home and doing nothing” was not an option.

Navalny’s optimism was genuine, and it was contagious. That’s probably why all of his family, his wife and two children have been unwavering­ly supportive of him even when he decided to come back to Russia.

He believed in the power of a personal example.

“I’m not scared – and you shouldn’t be, either,” he scrawled on a piece of paper and showed it to the cameras as he stood inside his glass defendants’ cage in 2021.

Even in the Arctic prison colony to which he was sent, he maintained the same defiance. That is what made him still dangerous to Putin. The only way to break his spirit, it appears, was to kill him.

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Alexei Navalny makes heart signs for his wife in a court glass cage in Moscow in 2021, the last time journalist­s would see him. Below, Nataliya Vasilyeva interviewi­ng the Russian opposition leader
‘I can see enough people to storm the Kremlin right now but we’re a peaceful people – we’re not going to do it right now’ Alexei Navalny makes heart signs for his wife in a court glass cage in Moscow in 2021, the last time journalist­s would see him. Below, Nataliya Vasilyeva interviewi­ng the Russian opposition leader
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 ?? ?? US president criticises Republican­s for taking two-week break as $61bn package remains stalled
US president criticises Republican­s for taking two-week break as $61bn package remains stalled

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