Alexei Navalny’s sweet online revenge on Vladimir
Putin
Video about ‘Putin’s palace’ has gone viral as Kremlin
critic hits back.
BY EVA
HARTOG
January 30,
2021 7:02 am
https://www.politico.eu/article/alexei-navalny-vladimir-putin-russia-sweet-online-revenge/
MOSCOW —
Just after Alexei Navalny woke up from the coma he’d been in since being
poisoned with a deadly nerve agent, one of his closest aides suggested that the
time had come to target Vladimir Putin.
“It was the
first work-related conversation we had,” Maria Pevchikh told POLITICO from an
undisclosed location outside of Russia. “The second he learned it was Putin who
was behind [the attack], it was like: We’re doing this.”
Pevchikh,
who runs Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation’s (FBK) investigative unit, was
with him when he was flown to Berlin in late August. German doctors would later
say the opposition politician had been poisoned with Novichok.
“We were
100 percent sure Putin was behind it, who else has access to a military-grade
nerve agent?” said Pevchikh.
A joint
investigation with reporters from Bellingcat detailing the alleged involvement
of Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) in the murder attempt dispelled any
remaining doubts they had.
For months,
she said, Navalny juggled physiotherapy and sleuthing while Pevchikh and her
colleague Georgy Alburov worked behind closed doors for 18 hours a day with no
days off, she said.
Fast
forward several months to January 17, when Navalny flew home.
Shortly
after landing he was detained at passport control and taken to a police
station. The next morning, a makeshift court ordered him jailed for 30 days for
violating parole ahead of a hearing that could see him locked up for years on
embezzlement charges that his supporters and the European Court of Human Rights
have described as unfair.
Less than
24 hours after the court ruling, Pevchikh posted a video on YouTube called
“Putin’s palace. History of world’s largest bribe.”
On
Thursday, the video reached 100 million views.
For
Navalny, the two-hour film, masterminded from his bed in an intensive care unit
in a German hospital, is one of a dwindling number of ways to fight back
against the Russian leader.
The video
zeroes in on a lavish estate on the Black Sea. It claims the “new Versailles,”
some 39 times the size of Monaco, is being financed by Putin’s cronies.
Reports of
an extravagant palace close to the southern Russian town of Gelendzhik go back
at least a decade and over the years journalists have sporadically sought to
dig deeper — at their own peril. On every occasion, Putin’s spokesman Dmitry
Peskov has denied any link between the president and the estate.
But never
before had the Gelendzhik palace been covered in such meticulous — and juicy —
detail.
As well as
exposing a complex financing scheme involving Russian state companies, the
video said the area around the palace was marked as a no-fly zone, access from
the coast was restricted, and the estate placed under the control of the
Federal Protective Service (FSO), the security agency tasked with the
president’s safety.
То
Navalny’s team, it was more evidence that the palace’s real owner is the
Russian president.
Aiming at
the top
For a
decade, the investigative branch of Navalny’s FBK has provided the opposition
leader with the ammunition he needed to take on Russia’s rich and powerful.
The team’s
investigations have targeted wealthy businessmen and politicians, including an
exposé on Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev in 2017, which triggered a series of
anti-corruption protests.
But it took
the poisoning to shift the focus onto Putin himself, even though Pevchikh says
the team had received a trickle of information about the palace for years, much
of it from disgruntled staff involved in a massive refurbishment project
because of a supposed mold problem.
For years,
however, the leaks languished in FBK members’ inboxes waiting for the right
moment.
“We were
lazy. The way Putin’s corruption scheme is set up is incredibly boring. The
paperwork is awful; one firm replaces another firm, whose ownership switches
hands from one offshore to another and so on. It wasn’t a fun story to
investigate,” Pevchikh said.
It wasn’t
all dull paperwork, however. Alburov — who was not available for comment
because he was serving a 10-day jail sentence for a post on social media
calling on Russians to protest Navalny’s arrest — recently recounted to Russian journalist
Michael Naki how he traveled to Russia’s Black Sea coast to get closer to the
estate.
To deflect
any unwanted attention from the security services, Alburov bought a fake train
ticket, and then switched from a train to a getaway car in the middle of the
night, leaving his phone with a companion who traveled on to the resort city of
Sochi, in case the phone was being monitored.
Together
with one of FBK’s lawyers, he then sailed out to sea in a rubber boat from
where they released a drone. The result was a detailed birds-eye-view of the
estate, which appears to include an underground ice-hockey rink and an 80-meter
bridge to a “teahouse.”
But the
real golden ticket was a detailed floor plan of the estate that they were sent
anonymously in the summer, not long before Navalny’s poisoning. “We couldn’t
believe our luck. Initially, we thought someone was trolling us,” Pevchikh
said.
The plans
were incredibly detailed, including information on specific items of furniture
that the team cross-checked with leaked photos of the palace to verify the
plans.
They then
made a 3D, interactive version of the palace’s interior in mind-boggling
detail, including a casino (which are banned in Russia) and a hookah bar with a
stage for pole dancing.
Within a
day the video outperformed the team’s Medvedev video (which got 41 million
views over three years) and rose to the top of Russia’s YouTube viewing
rankings. According to YouTube statistics cited by BBC Russia, the video has
had 32.6 million unique views, 62 percent of which can be attributed to Russian
IP addresses.
Statisticians
who have analyzed Navalny’s video suggest Russians have been watching it en
masse during their lunch breaks.
In a
country where the Kremlin relies on most people getting their information from
state television, the film presents a serious challenge to the authorities’
information monopoly.
“The video
outscores all of Russia’s propaganda outlets. By now, Navalny’s message has
reached about 55 percent of the adult Russian population,” Vasily Gatov, an
expert in Russian media, told POLITICO.
The video
likely helped fuel anger ahead of a nationwide protest last Saturday that saw
tens of thousands take to the streets in more than 120 cities across Russia.
Some protesters carried toilet brushes, in a nod to a scene in the video in
which Navalny claims palace staff recently placed an order for a toilet brush
worth €700.
“Putin is
on a binge, his toilet brush is more expensive than my mother’s yearly benefits
payment,” 21-year-old Maria Yermosh told POLITICO at last weekend’s Moscow
protest. “It’s disgusting.”
It is not
just Putin’s alleged wealth that has touched a raw nerve in a country where
2020 saw a record drop in Russians’ real incomes.
The video
starts in Dresden, where Putin once served as a KGB agent, and recounts his
rise to power and wealth through alleged shady dealings in St. Petersburg in
the 1990s.
“We wanted
to show that he was an average person, very mediocre. It was a sequence of very
mundane events that led to this. Things could have been very different,” said
Pevchikh. “We also wanted to show that this extreme thirst for money and wealth
has always been there. The second he got his hands on a tiny amount of power,
he started to steal.”
That
message appears to have hit home with some Russians, with songs and memes
ridiculing the president’s ostentatious taste.
“Many have
been upset by this pointless opulence. The video presents a certain image of
the people who rule us, who went from rags to riches,” Lev Gudkov, head of the
independent Levada Center polling firm, told the Meduza outlet.
With the
video dominating the national conversation, the Kremlin has launched a
counter-offensive to reclaim the narrative.
In an
unusual personal reaction this week, Putin called the video “boring,” while at
the same time denying any ties to the estate.
The FSB
admitted the existence of a no-fly zone in the area but attributed it to
“increased NATO activity.” The FSO, meanwhile, simply denied there were any
restrictions on the site. State television channel Rossia-1 on Friday aired a
segment about a shabby-looking building still under construction, calling it an
“unfinished hotel.” Meanwhile, the real owner has yet to be named.
After a
court on Thursday rejected an appeal to have Navalny released from jail, his
associates once again called on Russians to take to the streets on Sunday.
“The street
now has the final word,” Navalny’s ally Leonid Volkov, who himself is facing
criminal charges, said on Twitter. “There’s simply no other option left.”
Recent
events suggest, however, the authorities are opting for a crackdown rather than
dialogue.
Gatov, the
media expert, doesn’t discount that, considering the YouTube video’s astronomic
success, the online sphere could be next.
“The state
has many censorship tools, and it could resort to them if it senses a real
threat. So far it hasn’t censored platforms such as YouTube, TikTok or Twitter,
which Navalny relies on to convey his message. But as tension grows, I wouldn’t
exclude such action, with an unpredictable outcome,” he said.
Navalny’s
investigations team, however, has vowed to continue its work, calling the
palace video the beginning of a series of exposés on the president.
“You could
call it revenge. But real revenge should take place in a courtroom. Since that
option is not available, we’re fighting this battle with the weapon that we’ve
mastered: flying drones, telling stories and digging up details,” said
Pevchikh.
“There will
be many, many, many more stories to come.”
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