Russian prosecutors on Tuesday called for jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny to serve 13 years in prison on new fraud charges. Navalny, President Putin’s most vocal domestic critic, was jailed last year after surviving a poison attack he blames on the Kremlin. He now faces embezzlement and contempt of court charges and has been put on trial at the prison colony outside Moscow where he is already serving a 2.5 year sentence. “I request that Navalny be sentenced to a term of 13 years and a subsequent two years of probation,” the prosecutor, Nadezhda Tikhonova, was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies. The prosecutor asked for Navalny to be sent to a “strict regime” penal colony, which would place him in much harsher conditions with cellmates who are repeat offenders. The prosecutor also called for him to pay a fine of 1.2m rubles ($£8,685.). “You can’t put everyone in prison. Even if you ask for 113 years, you won’t scare me or others like me,” Navalny said in court, his team wrote on social media. The judge will issue a verdict on 22 March. It was not immediately clear whether the 13 years would include the sentence Navalny is currently serving. His corruption charges carry a maximum penalty of 10 years, while contempt of court is punishable by up to six months. Navalny spoke in court wearing his black prison uniform, with journalists watching via a video link. The transmission constantly cut out during his final speech, Mediazona news site reported. A key Navalny aide and former head of his regional offices, Leonid Volkov, said that Russia is seeking to keep Navalny jailed for life. “He was sentenced to life from the very start. So long as Putin is still in the Kremlin,” Volkov said on Twitter. Navalny’s spokeswoman, Kira Yarmysh, said his sentence depends on “how long Putin is in power”. “Then we will do everything so that he doesn’t stay in power long,” Yarmysh said. Navalny is “an absolutely innocent person who is on trial because he speaks the truth about Putin’s criminal regime”, said Lyubov Sobol, an opposition political activist and Navalny supporter, who, like Yarmysh and Volkov, has left Russia. Investigators accuse Navalny of stealing for personal use several million dollars’ worth of donations that were given to his political organisations. Before he was jailed, Navalny was Russia’s main opposition leader and his team frequently published investigations into the wealth of Russia’s elites that garnered millions of views on YouTube. Navalny’s poisoning in 2020 with a military-grade nerve agent and arrest on his return from rehabilitation in Germany last year sparked widespread condemnation abroad as well as sanctions from western capitals. After his arrest, Navalny’s political organisations across the country were declared “extremist” and shut down, while many key aides fled Russia fearing prosecution. Russia has also ramped up pressure on independent media and NGOs, with many declared foreign agents or shut down under fear of prosecution. A string of closures followed after Russia passed a new law introducing up to 15 years in jail for “fake news” about what Russia calls its military operation in Ukraine. In an effort to further control the information available to its domestic audience, Russia this month restricted access to Twitter, Facebook and Instagram, and has blocked the websites of several independent news outlets. On Instagram, Navalny has denounced the conflict and called on his supporters to protest, despite the high likelihood of fines and arrest. During his final speech, Navalny condemned Russia’s intervention in Ukraine, saying it was “the duty of every person” to oppose it. Over the past two weeks, close to 15,000 people have been detained at anti-war demonstrations across Russia, according to independent monitor OVD-Info.
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