Prominent anti-corruption blogger and opposition activist Aleksey Navalny has been found guilty of embezzlement on a large scale, and sentenced to 5 years in jail.
Navalny was immediately remanded into custody after the verdict was read out, along with his accomplice Ofitserov, who got 4 years in prison.
На Навального надевают Наручники #судвкировеpic.twitter.com/PujlqzTOTj
— РАПСИ (@rapsinews) July 18, 2013
Both Navalny and Ofitserov said goodbye to their wives.
“He and us, we were prepared for it – to the extent that one
may be able to prepare for things like this,” Yulia Navalnaya
said. She added that despite the isolation, Navalny is planning
to carry on with the anti-corruption activity.
Ofitserov is a father of five children, and his wife, crying in
court, said goodbye to her husband.
Both Aleksey Navalny and Ofitserov have been transported to a
detention facility in Kirov.
The reading of 100 page document took more than three hours, with
the judge asserting the court’s decision wasn’t politically
motivated.
The court ruled that Aleksey Navalny and Ofitserov, caused 16
million rubles ($500,000) in damages to the state-owned Kirovles
timber company where Navalny worked as a volunteer in 2009.
Navalny's lawyers say they are going to appeal the verdict, which
they must do within the next 10 days.
Navalny had previously said he might drop out of Moscow’s mayoral
race if convicted, his electoral team said. The team’s head,
Leonid Volkov, said that they are going to address the Moscow
election committee shortly. However, they still plan on
organizing protests and a boycott campaign against the upcoming
September poll. The Moscow election committee stated that despite
the verdict, Navalny remains a registered mayoral candidate by
law.
The supporters of the opposition leader gathered outside the court, holding banners criticizing Russian authorities. More rallies are planned across the globe for on Thursday, including calls to gather in the center of Moscow.
Вот вам лук Ленинского суда г. Кирова на 8:00 сегодняшнего дня #судвкировеpic.twitter.com/N0f2LMxoxi
— Андрей Быстров (@bystrov_a) July 18, 2013
Navalny stood trial on charges of embezzling property from the
state-owned Kirovles Company in 2009, which is located in
Russia’s central Kirov Region.
At the time Navalny worked as a volunteer aide to Kirov Governor
Nikita Belykh, who was tasked with reforming the region’s
industry.
The prosecution said Navalny ordered Ofitserov, whom the court
deemed to be his accomplice, to set up an intermediary firm and
then persuaded Kirovles director Vyacheslav Opalev to sign a
contract with the company on unfavorable terms.
Navalny has been standing trial over embezzlement of property
from the state-owned Kirovles company, in the central Russian
Kirov Region, that took place in 2009. Back then the would-be
whistleblower worked as a volunteer aide to Kirov Governor Nikita
Belykh, dealing with reforms of regional industry.
The prosecution said Navalny ordered Ofitserov, called his accomplice by the court, to set up an intermediary firm and then persuaded Kirovles director Vyacheslav Opalev to sign a contract with the company on unfavorable terms. The overall damages to Kirovles amounted to 16 million rubles, according to a law enforcement estimate.
Navalny and his defense adamantly denied the charges, saying that
as a voluntary aide for the governor he had no leverage to
persuade state executives to make such significant decisions, and
that the court failed to prove that he actually benefited from
the scam.
Politically motivated case?
The anti-corruption blogger had repeatedly called the case
against him fabricated and politically motivated, claiming it was
an act of revenge by the Russian authorities over his disclosure
of state corruption schemes - along with his high-profile
participation in the Russian opposition movement.
Navalny pointed to the fact that the Kirovles case, which had
been shuttered twice before due to a lack of evidence, re-opened
less than a week after he accused Investigative Committee chief
Aleksandr Bastrykin of being a foreign agent, alleging the chief
investigator held a residence permit in the Czech Republic.
He also claimed that Opalev, the main witness against Navalny,
agreed to testify against him and Ofitserov in exchange for a
softer sentence. Opalev has already been tried for his role in
the case, and was given a four-year suspended sentence.
The defense also blasted the court’s refusal to summon witnesses
they claimed could prove Navalny’s innocence; the judge ruled
that the lawyers failed to clarify the relevance of their
testimonies.
Nevertheless some of the witnesses voluntarily appeared at the
hearing backing up the main defense line and claiming Navalny and
Ofitserov fell victim to bureaucratic chaos in Kirovles. Maria
Gaidar another former governor's aide, confirmed that Navalny as
an aide could only “advise” the governor, while Belykh
himself claimed Navalny did not cause any financial damage to the
region during his service.
Navalny’s ups and downs
Aleksey Navalny is a 37-year-old Russian lawyer and a political
activist who has gained tremendous media popularity, especially
in Western media, since 2009. He is known for publicly
criticizing the administration of Vladimir Putin and the level of
corruption in the country. He was also instrumental in organizing
numerous sanctioned and unsanctioned protests in the Russian
capital, leading to his and his supporters’ repeated arrests.
In his earlier political career as an acting Deputy Chief of the
Moscow branch of the social-liberal Yabloko party, Navalny made
headlines by supporting the ultra-nationalist 2006 Russian March,
which Yabloko condemned as a program of “fascist, Nazi,
xenophobic manifestations" - a sentiment shared by many
other media outlets and NGOs.
This led to his exclusion from Yabloko the following year. The unofficial reason for his discharge, however, was his alleged attempt to overthrow the party leadership.
In 2007, Navalny became one of the founders of the Nation nationalist movement. In 2008, Nation was incorporated into a vaguely structured coalition of far-right groups known collectively as the Russian National Movement. It ceased to exist in 2011.
Besides being well-known for his populist but nationalistic
political outlook, Navalny is also famous for his political blog
which was used to organize mass demonstrations in Moscow during
the parliamentary elections in December 2011 and presidential
elections in March 2012.
But he really rose to fame in 2010 with the launch of the Rospil project, which quickly became notorious for disclosing alleged corruption by government officials. Navalny used online channels to publish confidential information about oil pipeline giant Transneft's auditing, exposing what appeared to be a multi-million dollar theft during the construction of an Eastern Siberia – Pacific Ocean oil pipeline. Further whistleblowing activity followed, earning him popularity in social media and the press.
Navalny was also the man who coined the phrase “party of
crooks and thieves,” which became a ubiquitous nickname in
opposition circles for the country's ruling United Russia party.
Taking to the streets
Navalny was one of the key figures in organizing numerous
sanctioned and unsanctioned meetings in the Russian capital,
which led to his and his supporters’ arrests when tens of
thousands protested in Central Moscow's Bolotnaya Square over
allegations of election fraud in parliamentary elections that
were won by United Russia, led by then-prime minister Vladimir
Putin.
The protest, organized by numerous opposition groups and
featuring various movement leaders, attracted around 6,000
members of what is now known as Team Navalny. Police arrested
some 300 people as the blogger headed an unsanctioned protest
over the Russian elections at Moscow's Triumfalnaya Square. For
his role in the protests, the 37-year-old was sent to jail for 15
days.
On his release from custody he publicly urged Russians to vote
against the candidacy of Putin in the upcoming presidential
election in March 2012.
Four days later, December 24, he led another 50,000 people in an anti-government rally.
“I see enough people to take the Kremlin right now,”
Navalny shouted to his supporters.
After the presidential election in March, Navalny organized another anti-Putin rally in Pushkin Square, attended by as many as 20,000 people. There he was also detained for questioning for several hours but eventually released by the authorities.
Gaining political support, he led another anti-government rally on 8 May, a day after Putin's inauguration. Navalny and the opposition's leftist faction's leader Sergey Udaltsov were apprehended by the authorities after a gathering at Chistye Prudy. Navalny was once again sentenced to 15 days in jail.
While being exceptionally determined to reveal alleged corruption
schemes, at the same time, Navalny is extremely secretive when
asked about his own sponsors and allies.
Navalny does not officially belong to any political party, but is being backed by the People’s Alliance party, which pronounces its ultimate goal as “bringing Russia closer to European civilization.” Earlier this month the Justice Ministry ordered a temporary suspension of the party's registration.
Presented as one of the main opposition figures and having gained tremendous publicity online, Navalny still can’t boast the same level of awareness in the streets. The latest poll conducted by the Levada Center in June showed that almost 60 per cent of Russians knew nothing about the opposition figure. Meanwhile, 29 per cent were aware of the theft charges he faces, with over 40 per cent believing the case was fabricated to “shut him up.”
In April, during a nationwide Q&A session, Russian President
Vladimir Putin stressed he had told prosecutors and other law
enforcers to ensure the trial is objective.
“There should be no illusions like when someone is calling for
everyone to catch a thief, giving this person a license to steal.
But this also does not mean that someone whose views differ from
those of the authorities must be put on trial and dragged to
prison,” Putin said.