‘They’re doing everything to avoid handing over
his body’: Kremlin plays for time after Navalny’s death
In Russia, the battle to eradicate the opposition
leader and his legacy will continue long after his death
Andrew Roth
Sat 17 Feb
2024 19.45 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2024/feb/17/kremlin-plays-for-time-after-alexei-navalny-death
In Russia,
it is not enough to kill an opposition leader. His ageing mother must travel to
the Arctic Circle to search a prison colony and a morgue for his body. Russians
with the temerity to lay carnations in his memory must be detained.
Even a
preliminary cause of death, “sudden death syndrome”, was misleading, as though
his death behind bars was not years in the making.
All this
happened the day after Alexei Navalny died, as the bureaucratic machinery of
the vast Russian state swung into gear, brushing over the Kremlin critic’s
death with a veneer of official disdain and petty cruelty.
“It’s
obvious that they are lying and doing everything they can to avoid handing over
the body,” said Kira Yarmysh, Navalny’s press secretary, as 69-year-old
Lyudmila, his mother, and a lawyer battled to retrieve his body in the city of
Salekhard.
Maybe next
week, investigators told them, saying the cause of death had not been
established and there were still tests to run.
“Putin
killed Alexei Navalny,” said Georgy Alburov, a Navalny ally and researcher for
his Anti-Corruption Foundation. “How exactly he did it will certainly be
exposed, but right now we will observe an endless marathon of lies and playing
for time. Putin will do everything to make it impossible to establish what
actually happened to Alexei.”
For now,
Russia tries to stymie Navalny’s family and supporters, with no act of
interference too small to disrupt memorials to a defiant critic of Russian
president Vladimir Putin. The task is shared among thousands of state
employees, from the Kremlin officials to investigators, prosecutors and judges,
riot police, prison guards, television anchors and writers, and many more, each
contributing a small bit to an irresistible force that has crushed whatever
Russia had of a pro-democracy movement.
Nothing
personal. That’s the job. Just as Vladimir Putin never mentioned Navalny by
name, so the Russian politician barely merited a mention on state television,
the better for the public to forget about him.
Instead, in
the short segments referencing his death, he was referred to with a new title
coined by the penitentiary service: “The convict.” But generally, state media
ignored his passing.
At protests
outside Russian embassies around the world, as well as inside Russia, his
supporters sought to memorialise his name.
“Hello,
this is Navalny!” some chanted, a reference to the intro for his investigative
YouTube films, which helped build him a wide public following based on his
anti-corruption agenda and acerbic wit.
He had
placed a bet on imagining a happier Russia, where people were encouraged to act
morally. “We have everything – but we are an unhappy country … Russia should
not only be free, but also happy. Russia will be happy,” he said at a final
courtroom appearance in 2021.
And in a
country dominated by apathy towards politics, he also encouraged activism and
energy: “If they decide to kill me, it means that we are incredibly strong … we
need to utilise this power to not give up, to remember we are a huge power that
is being oppressed by these bad dudes.”
Many of
those clocked in and grabbed their riot shields and batons on Saturday, as
small groups of dedicated supporters headed to vigils or individual pickets in
32 cities to protest what they believed was a political assassination of
Navalny by Vladimir Putin.
“Navalny
was killed because we didn’t care,” one protester wrote on a sign in front of
St Petersburg’s Kazan Cathedral. He was quickly detained, as were 358 others in
cities across Russia.
It was
hardly the largest protest Russia has seen, but any demonstration now is of
note, since authorities have effectively banned public gatherings.
“Why be
afraid? You only live once,” said one young woman speaking on camera to
Sotavision, an independent Russian media outlet.
“If you
don’t come now, then when?… It’s still not [as bad as] Belarus yet, it’s still
possible to go out and speak your opinion.”
When they
didn’t make arrests, police still engaged in tense back-and-forths with Navalny
supporters.
“Go grieve
in the subway,” one said, as he dispersed a crowd at the Solovetsky Stone, a
monument to the victims of political repression, near the former KGB
headquarters in Moscow.
The cycle
of death and state obfuscation has played out predictably, as it did with the
assassination of Putin critic Boris Nemtsov near the Kremlin walls in 2015.
On Friday,
the president appeared smiling and joking with factory workers in Chelyabinsk,
hours after he had been informed about Navalny’s death, according to press
secretary Dmitry Peskov.
By Saturday
yesterday evening, Navalny’s mother in Salekhard still could not locate his
body. At the prison colony, she was told it was in the morgue. The morgue was
closed.
For now,
his supporters grapple with his loss.
“It’s very,
very difficult,” wrote Maria Pevchikh, a close ally who heads investigations
for the Anti-Corruption Foundation. “It’s unbearable … Just remember, we are in
this horror together, and we need to get out of it together too.
“Navalny is
an impossible loss, irreparable.”
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