San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

MOSCOW COURT REJECTS NAVALNY’S APPEAL

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A Russian court cleared the way on Saturday for the possible transfer of the opposition leader Alexei Navalny to the country’s penal colony system, the latest step by authoritie­s to silence the man who has become the country’s most vocal critic of President Vladimir Putin.

The court rejected Navalny’s last possible appeal before such a transfer, but it remains unclear whether or when he will leave his cell in a high-security prison in Moscow. He could be held there for further court appearance­s on other pending legal matters.

Navalny was detained in January upon returning from Germany, where he was being treated for a near-lethal poisoning with a nerve agent last year — an act that he and Western government­s blamed on the Kremlin. He returned despite knowing that his homecoming would almost surely land him in prison, a challenge that gave rise to mass street protests in support of him.

The ruling, which was expected, upheld Navalny’s sentence of more than two years in prison and set Russia on a collision course with Western nations, which could impose additional sanctions on Moscow. On Tuesday, the European Court of Human Rights, whose jurisdicti­on is recognized by Russia, ruled that Navalny must be released immediatel­y from prison.

The Kremlin’s spokesman, Dmitri Peskov, rejected that demand and called the Strasbourg, France-based court’s ruling “a serious attempt to intervene in internal judicial matters of Russia.”

In his final argument in court on Saturday, Navalny quoted from the Bible, and said that prosecutor­s, the judge and other government officials should stop lying because sooner or later the truth will triumph.

Over the past month, Navalny’s allies have organized two countrywid­e protests in his support that drew tens of thousands to the streets. The police arrested thousands.

The poisoning, the sentencing and the crackdown on protesters all signaled a pivot by Putin to harder-line domestic policies. Navalny has been jailed frequently before, but only for brief stints in Moscow, and he has never been sent to a penal colony.

Under Russia’s criminal justice system, transferri­ng an inmate to the penal colonies is a lengthy process of travel on a specialize­d prisoner train wagon. It can begin at any point after a court rejects the first appeal of a sentencing, which happened on Saturday.

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