RUSSIA
Who tried to kill Alexei Navalny?
The Russian anti-corruption crusader was organizing a
challenge to the Kremlin when he was allegedly poisoned.
By EVA
HARTOG
08/21/2020
03:39 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2020/08/21/who-tried-to-kill-alexei-navalny-400063
MOSCOW —
The list of suspects who wished Alexei Navalny ill is a long one. The Russian
opposition leader and anti-corruption crusader has as many enemies as he has
lodged accusations of graft against Russia’s political elite.
He is also
Vladimir Putin’s most politically powerful opponent — and he was in the middle
of organizing a challenge to the Russian president’s political party's hold on
regional power in elections next month.
So, after he
fell ill and lost consciousness during a flight from the Siberian city of Tomsk
on Thursday, it did not take long for the hunt for a culprit to begin.
“It is
Putin,” tweeted Navalny’s spokeswoman Kira Yarmysh, saying Navalny had been
poisoned. “Whether or not he personally gave the order, the responsibility is
entirely on him.”
The
accusation is unsurprising: Russia has a long history in which the health of
the Kremlin’s critics suddenly takes a nosedive.
Navalny’s
illness bears an eerie resemblance to what happened to journalist and Putin
critic Anna Politkovskaya in 2004, when she suddenly fainted after boarding a
plane on her way to report on a hostage crisis. As in Navalny’s case, those
close to Politkovskaya pointed to a cup of tea laced with a toxin as the
presumable cause. (Politkovskaya survived that attack but was fatally shot in
front of her home two years later.)
The
headline-grabbing poisonings of the Russian defectors Alexander Litvinenko and
Sergei Skripal are other examples — as is the case of opposition activist Pyotr
Verzilov, who fell sick after attending a court hearing in 2018.
In
Navalny’s long career as an opposition politician, he has faced constant
harassment in the form of court cases and police raids. Sometimes, things got
physical, such as when assailants threw a green antiseptic in his face in 2017
or when he suffered a mysterious “allergy attack” while in police custody last
year. But somehow, he miraculously seemed to avoid landing in mortal peril —
that is, until Thursday.
There’s no
lack of powerful Russians who would be happy to see him gone. “This is a huge
blow to Russia’s political system,” Alexei Venediktov, the editor of the Echo
Moskvy radio station, said in a broadcast on Thursday. “But the beneficiaries
are not difficult to find.”
The
“beneficiaries” he and other commentators have pointed to are the rich and
famous who have been targeted by Navalny’s corruption investigations and
factions within the elite with ties to rival law enforcement structures vying
for more influence.
But there’s
also little denying that the timing of Navalny’s misfortune comes at a
politically sensitive time for the Kremlin. In recent weeks, neighboring
country Belarus has been rocked by large-scale street protests calling for the
resignation of its longtime leader Alexander Lukashenko.
The uprising
next door is exactly the kind of civic unrest that Putin, whose ratings are
falling, considers an existential threat — and Navalny had been championing it
on social media.
“The
question playing out in front of our eyes in Belarus right now is: Can civil
protest trump the strongmen with ties to the security forces?” said Abbas
Gallyamov, a political analyst and former Kremlin speechwriter.
“If it
succeeds in Belarus, then it’ll inspire the opposition here and demoralize
Putin’s strongman backers. It could also push Putin to reconsider his own
political strategy beyond 2024,” when his current term is set to end.
Earlier
this summer, Putin — having declared the worst of the corona crisis over —
organized and won a vote on constitutional reforms that pave the way for him to
remain president until 2036.
Though
Putin’s power grab was contested by the president’s critics, there were no
large-scale protests against it.
This was in
large part because Navalny — arguably the only political player capable of
organizing a nationwide protest — called for a boycott of the vote but did
little more. Instead, he urged his supporters to focus their energy on regional
elections in September.
More
specifically, he has promoted a “smart voting” strategy designed to squeeze out
Kremlin-backed candidates by consolidating support behind their biggest rivals.
This was used in city council elections in Moscow last year, that led to
pro-government candidates losing almost half of their seats — a victory
Navalny’s team was hoping to repeat this summer nationwide in the run-up to
important State Duma elections in 2021.
When
Navalny fell ill, he was on his way back from a campaign trip to Siberia that
included a stop in Russia’s third-largest city Novosibirsk, where 34 opposition
candidates are running for 50 seats in the city council.
It’s a
contest in which the opposition feels it can make real headway, as it taps into
widespread discontent and anti-establishment in the Russian periphery. Sergei
Boiko, the head of Navalny’s regional campaign office in Novosibirsk, came
second in mayoral elections last year.
“People are
more self-sufficient here,” said Olga Kartavtseva, the head of Navalny’s
campaign office in Omsk, the city where Navalny is being treated in hospital.
“Siberia is far from the center. Moscow’s tentacles don’t reach here.”
In the city
of Khabarovsk in Russia’s Far East, large-scale protests broke out last month
after the arrest of a local governor. The protests quickly turned against
Moscow and Putin himself.
“Protest
sentiment is increasing,” said political analyst Gallyamov. “Khabarovsk is a
perfect example. All it takes is a trigger — whether it’s an environmental, an
economic or a political story, and any Russian region has the potential to blow
up.”
With
Navalny sidelined, his foes could be banking that protests such as that in
Khabarovsk will remain isolated incidents.
His
supporters, on the other hand, believe that the suspected poisoning itself
could become a rallying cry for the opposition.
“Rather
than weaken his support base, what’s happened to him will motivate people to
speak up,” predicted Kartavtseva. “It’ll act as a catalyst for protest.”


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