Miami Herald (Sunday)

Vladimir Putin must be prevented from killing opposition leader Alexei Navalny

- BY TRUDY RUBIN The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

When President Biden agreed with a newscaster that Vladimir Putin was “a killer,” I initially thought it a tactical error.

Not that the Russian leader isn’t a killer, having sent agents to murder dissidents abroad and to poison opposition leader Alexei Navalny at home — not to mention the murders of scores of other Russian activists and journalist­s on his watch.

Yet I thought it preferable to confront Putin in private, letting him know that, unlike Donald Trump, Biden and U.S. allies rejected the Russian’s fake denials. That way, necessary business could still be done with Moscow, but in a no-nonsense, no-illusions fashion.

However, it appears that Putin — despite his put-on pique at Biden’s “killer” label — doesn’t care if the world sees him kill Navalny. As soon as the opposition leader returned home from lifesaving treatment in Berlin, he was jailed on trumped-up charges and sent to one of Russia’s most notorious prisons. Having fallen seriously ill again, denied medical care, he has gone on a hunger strike and could die in prison.

Putin clearly believes he can kill opposition leaders with impunity. U.S. and European sanctions haven’t stopped his push to prove authoritar­ian systems are tougher than democracie­s.

Navalny’s present peril provides a warning that democracie­s must find a more effective way of pushing back.

This 44-year-old Russian corruption fighter, who has amassed a grassroots network of followers across the country via social media, has been locked up in the maximum-security Pokrov IK-2 penal colony known for its harsh treatment.

Labeled a “flight risk” — despite the fact he voluntaril­y returned from Germany — Navalny is awakened every 90 minutes by guards with flashlight­s.

This for someone still suffering the effects of being poisoned by a variant of a banned Soviet-era nerve toxin and who is now unable to feel his right leg and suffers severe pain.

“I have the right to call a doctor and get medicine. Neither of which I am given, stupidly,” he said in an Instagram post in his name. He reported he had received six reprimands during two weeks in prison for violations such as getting up 10 minutes early or wearing a T-shirt to meet his lawyer.

Such reprimands mean Navalny can be denied early release and can be sent to a freezing solitary cell with brutal regulation­s, according to Yevgenia Albats, an independen­t Russian journalist and friend of Navalny’s.

The opposition leader apparently enraged Putin with brilliantl­y produced

YouTube videos, including one about a vast Black Sea coastal palace built for Putin, complete with drone footage of the mansion.

The video garnered more than 90 million views.

And the Russian leader must fear Navalny’s appeal to the younger generation, even though the political activist has been banned from running for any office, and thousands of his supporters have been jailed. Doctors who first treated him in Russia when he was poisoned keep on dying.

And Navalny’s plight recalls the awful death of Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer for an internatio­nal capital fund who discovered a massive tax fraud by Russian Interior Ministry officials. He was arrested in Moscow by those very officials and allowed to die in 2009 in prison in agonizing pain from acute pancreatit­is, having been denied medical care.

What is so shocking about Navalny’s case is the apparent sense of impunity in the Kremlin. So-called Magnitsky sanctions for human-rights violations, passed by the U.S. Congress in the murdered lawyer’s name, have not deterred the Kremlin, nor have economic sanctions on Russia changed Putin’s behavior — on assassinat­ions, or hacking U.S. institutio­ns, or pulling troops out of Crimea or eastern Ukraine.

Given Putin’s neuralgia about Navalny, it’s not likely more sanctions would win his release.

It is vital for Biden and NATO allies to make clear to Putin that Navalny’s death would be a red line. That alone might prevent his murder in prison and gain him vital medical care.

And Navalny’s treatment is a warning that the United States and Europe must find a way, together, and beyond sanctions, to convince Putin he can’t mock internatio­nal norms with impunity. Perhaps Navalny’s case will finally persuade Germany to accept freezing constructi­on on the Nord Stream 2 pipeline from Russia.

As for the United States, the biggest imperative, as Biden knows, is for the country to rebuild its infrastruc­ture and reinvigora­te its technology — so autocrats will take it seriously once more.

Trudy Rubin is a columnist and editorial-board member for the The Philadelph­ia Inquirer. ©2021 Philadelph­ia

Inquirer

 ?? Getty Images ?? Less than half of Americans polled say that they belong to a religious organizati­on.
Getty Images Less than half of Americans polled say that they belong to a religious organizati­on.
 ?? THOMAS KRONSTEINE­R Getty Images ?? Despite internatio­nal economic sanctions, Russian President Vladimir Putin has been able to harass and kill his enemies.
THOMAS KRONSTEINE­R Getty Images Despite internatio­nal economic sanctions, Russian President Vladimir Putin has been able to harass and kill his enemies.
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