The Guardian (USA)

Alexei Navalny to be investigat­ed by Russian authoritie­s over alleged fraud

- AP in Moscow

Russian authoritie­s have ramped up the pressure on the prominent Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny by levelling new fraud accusation­s against him.

The Investigat­ive Committee, Russia’s main investigat­ive agency, said on Tuesday it had opened a new criminal case against Navalny on charges of large-scale fraud related to his alleged mishandlin­g of $5m in private donations to his Anti-Corruption Foundation and other organisati­ons.

Navalny, who is convalesci­ng in Germany after an August poisoning with a nerve agent that he blamed on the Kremlin, ridiculed the new accusation­s as a sign of Vladimir Putin’s agitation.

“It looks like Putin is in hysterics,” Navalny said of the Russian president on Twitter.

Navalny fell sick on 20 August during a domestic flight in Russia and two days later was flown still in a coma for treatment to Berlin, where he spent weeks in intensive care. Labs in Germany, France and Sweden, and tests by the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons, the intergover­nmental body based in The Hague, establishe­d that he was exposed to a

Soviet-era novichok nerve agent.

Navalny has accused Putin of ordering his poisoning. The Kremlin has repeatedly denied the accusation.

“They are trying to put me behind bars for failing to die and continuing to hunt for my killers and for proving that Putin was behind it,” Navalny tweeted.

News of the investigat­ion involving Navalny came a day after the country’s prison agency accused him of violating the conditions of his suspended sentence in a previous case and gave him one day to report to its office. In the decade since he started writing about official corruption in Russia and moved into running for political office, Navalny, 44, has been arrested repeatedly and faced various charges.

The Federal Penitentia­ry Service pointed at an article by doctors from Berlin’s Charite hospital that was published in medical journal The Lancet and indicated that Navalny had fully recuperate­d. It ordered Navalny to visit its office in line with the terms of a three-and-a-half year suspended sentence he received for a 2014 conviction or face a real jail term if he misses Tuesday’s deadline.

Navalny, who previously said that he planned to return to Russia once he fully recovered, scoffed at the demand, saying that the Federal Penitentia­ry Service’s reference to the article in The Lancet amounted to the government accepting he was poisoned.

Russian authoritie­s have insisted that doctors who treated Navalny in Siberia before he was airlifted to Germany found no trace of poison and have challenged German officials to provide proof of his poisoning. They refused to open a full criminal inquiry, citing the lack of evidence that Navalny was poisoned.

The EU imposed sanctions on six Russian officials and a state research institute after tests by the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons concluded that Navalny had been exposed to novichok. Russia has hit back with its own sanctions against EU officials.

 ??  ?? Alexei Navalny speaking to media in Moscow in December 2019. Photograph: Alexander Zemlianich­enko/AP
Alexei Navalny speaking to media in Moscow in December 2019. Photograph: Alexander Zemlianich­enko/AP

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