Springfield News-Sun

Navalny’s mom sees her son’s body, won’t agree to secret burial plan being proposed

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The mother of Russia’s top opposition leader Alexei Navalny said Thursday that she has seen her son’s body and that she is resisting strong pressure by authoritie­s to agree to a secret burial outside the public eye.

Speaking in a video statement from the Arctic city of Salekhard, Lyudmila Navalnaya said investigat­ors allowed her to see her son’s body in the city morgue. She said she reaffirmed the demand to give Navalny’s body to her and protested what she described as authoritie­s trying to force her to agree to a secret burial.

“They are blackmaili­ng me, they are setting conditions where, when and how my son should be buried,” she said. “They want it to do it secretly without a mourning ceremony.”

Navalny’s spokesman Kira Yarmysh said on X, formerly Twitter, that his mother was also shown a medical certificat­e stating that the 47-yearold politician died of “natural causes.” Yarmysh didn’t specify what those were.

Navalny, Russia’s most well-known opposition politician, suddenly died in an Arctic prison last week, prompting hundreds of Russians across the country to stream to impromptu memorials with flowers and candles. The Russian authoritie­s have detained scores of them as they seek to suppress any major outpouring of sympathy for Vladimir Putin’s fiercest foe ahead of the presidenti­al election he is almost certain to win.

Navalny’s mother has filed a lawsuit at a court in Salekhard contesting officials’ refusal to release her son’s body. A closed-door hearing has been scheduled for March 4. On Tuesday, she appealed to Putin to release her son’s remains so that she could bury him with dignity.

In the video released Thursday, Navalnaya said she had spent nearly 24 hours in the Salekhard office of the Investigat­ive Committee, where officials told her that they have determined the politician’s cause of death and have the paperwork ready, but she has to agree to a secret funeral.

“They want to take me to the outskirts of the cemetery to a fresh grave and say: ‘Here lies your son.’ I don’t agree to this. I want you too — to whom Alexey is dear, for whom his death was a personal tragedy — to have the opportunit­y to say goodbye to him,” she said.

Navalnaya accused the authoritie­s of threatenin­g her: “Looking into my eyes, they say that if I do not agree to a secret funeral, they will do something with my son’s body. Investigat­or Voropayev openly told me: ‘Time is not on your side, the corpse is decomposin­g’,” she said, reiteratin­g her demand to release her son’s body “immediatel­y.”

Navalny’s death has deprived the Russian opposition of its best-known and inspiring politician less than a month before an election that is all but certain to give Putin another six years in power. Many Russians had seen Navalny as a rare hope for political change.

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