Thursday, July 18, 2013

Russian protest leader Alexei Navalny convicted

Russian protest leader Alexei Navalny convicted

Daniel Sandford says Alexei Navalny had angered President Putin by saying his party was full of 'crooks and thieves'

Related Stories

Russian protest leader Alexei Navalny has been found guilty of embezzlement, in a trial he claims is politically motivated.
Judge Sergei Blinov said the anti-corruption campaigner had defrauded a timber firm.
Mr Navalny has always denied the charge, insisting he was brought to trial because of his opposition to President Vladimir Putin.
The verdict means he may not be able to run for Moscow mayor in September.
Alexei Navalny arrived at the courtroom in Kirov to hear the verdict, after a 12-hour overnight train journey from Moscow.

Alexei Navalny's rise to prominence

  • 2008: Started blogging about allegations of corruption at some of Russia's big state-controlled firms
  • Nov 2011: Ahead of parliamentary poll, he criticised President Putin's United Russia, famously dubbing it the "party of crooks and thieves"
  • Dec 2011: After the poll, he inspired mass protests against the Kremlin, and was arrested and imprisoned for 15 days
  • Oct 2012: Won most votes in a poll to choose opposition leadership
  • April 2013: Went on trial
  • July 2013: Declared himself a candidate for Moscow mayoral election
  • July 2013: Found guilty of theft and embezzlement
The BBC's Moscow correspondent Daniel Sandford said Mr Navalny smiled in a resigned manner when the almost inevitable guilty verdict came.
The key question now is whether Judge Blinov will give the full six year prison sentence for which the prosecution have asked, our correspondent says.
Mr Navalny recently said he would like to stand for president, but if he is jailed for that long he will be unable to contest the 2018 presidential election.
'Crooks and thieves'
Mr Navalny, 37, was found guilty of heading a group that embezzled 16m rubles ($500,000, £330,000) worth of timber from the Kirovles state timber company while working as an adviser to Kirov's governor Nikita Belykh.
"The court, having examined the case, has established that Navalny organised a crime and ... the theft of property on a particularly large scale," Judge Blinov told the court.
Mr Navalny, tweeting before the verdict, said the judge was simply repeating the accusations made by prosecutors.
"So... there will be no nice scenario with an acquittal," he tweeted.
Russian protest leader Alexei Navalny (4th L) attends a court hearing in Kirov, July 18, 2013Alexei Navalny tweeted his views on the case from the courtroom
In his closing remarks earlier this month, Mr Navalny was unrepentant, saying the case had been fabricated to remove him from politics.
"We will destroy this feudal society that is robbing all of us," he raged.
"If somebody thought that on hearing the threat of six years in prison I was going to run away abroad or hide somewhere, they were mistaken. I cannot run away from who I am."
Mr Navalny came to prominence when he inspired mass protests against the Kremlin and President Vladimir Putin in December 2011.
He is now one of the key figures of the opposition - a thorn in the side of the political establishment, campaigning against the endemic corruption, our correspondent says.
Mr Navalny has also coined a phrase to describe the ruling party United Russia that has stuck in everyone's minds - "the party of crooks and thieves".

No comments: