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Alexei Navalny, left, with his lawyers and court security staff, as he hears the accusations against him.
Alexei Navalny, left, with his lawyers and court security staff, listens to the accusations against him. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
Alexei Navalny, left, with his lawyers and court security staff, listens to the accusations against him. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

Alexei Navalny sentenced to 9 more years in prison after fraud conviction

This article is more than 2 years old

Jailed Russian opposition leader pleaded not guilty to new charges that he says were politically motivated

The jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has been sentenced to 9 years in a maximum security penal colony after being found guilty of large-scale fraud and contempt by a Russian court.

Navalny, Vladimir Putin’s most prominent critic, is already serving a two-and-a-half year sentence at a prison camp east of Moscow for parole violations related to charges he says were fabricated to thwart his political ambitions.

Navalny, who the court also fined 1.2 million roubles ($11,535), has dismissed the latest criminal case against him as politically motivated and pleaded not guilty.

A gaunt Navalny stood besides his lawyers in a room filled with prison security officers as the judge read out the accusations. The 45-year-old seemed unfazed as he flipped through court documents.

After the sentencing, he tweeted a quote from the US television series The Wire. “Nine years. Well, as the characters of my favourite TV series The Wire used to say: ‘You only do two days. That’s the day you go in and the day you come out.’ I even had a T-shirt with this slogan, but the prison authorities confiscated it, considering the print extremist.”

9 years. Well, as the characters of my favorite TV series “The Wire” used to say: “You only do two days. That's the day you go in and the day you come out"
I even had a T-shirt with this slogan, but the prison authorities confiscated it, considering the print extremist.

— Alexey Navalny (@navalny) March 22, 2022

Prosecutors had asked the court to send him to a maximum-security penal colony for 13 years on charges of fraud and contempt of court.

The judge, Margarita Kotova, said Navalny had committed a criminal offence by publicly insulting the court. She confirmed he had pleaded not guilty to the fraud charges.

Navalny was jailed last year on his return to Russia after receiving medical treatment in Germany following a poison attack with a Soviet-era nerve agent during a visit to Siberia in 2020. Navalny blamed Putin for the attack.

The Kremlin said it had seen no evidence that Navalny was poisoned and denied any Russian role if he was.

After the last court hearing into his case, on 15 March, Navalny struck a typically defiant tone, writing on Instagram: “If the prison term is the price of my human right to say things that need to be said … then they can ask for 113 years. I will not renounce my words or deeds.”

Authorities have cast Navalny and his supporters as subversives determined to destabilise Russia with backing from the west. Many of Navalny’s allies have fled rather than face restrictions or jail at home.

Navalny’s opposition movement has been labelled “extremist” and shut down, although his supporters continue to express their political stance on social media, including their opposition to Moscow’s military intervention in Ukraine.

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Funeral of Alexei Navalny in Moscow – in pictures

  • ‘They don’t care about the optics’: in Navalny’s funeral, echoes of dissidents past

  • ‘It’s a torture regime’: the last days of Alexei Navalny

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