Three days after Russian opposition figure Alexey Navalny was sentenced to three-and-a-half years in jail, minus time served, the anti-corruption activist is back in court on Friday over accusations he defamed a war veteran.
The country’s authorities opened the case against Navalny after he called 94-year-old Ignat Artemenko a “traitor” for appearing in a video, published by RT in Russian in June 2020, encouraging people to come out and vote in the upcoming plebiscite on proposed constitutional changes. The advertisement also included Russians from other walks of life, including an astronaut, an olympian and a doctor.
Artemenko was born in 1926 in Eastern Belarus and fought for the Soviet Union in World War II, known in Russia as ‘The Great Patriotic War’.
In June, a tweet sent from Navalny's account called the video’s participants “corrupt lackeys.”
“Oh, here they are, darlings. I must admit that the team of corrupt lackeys looks rather weak. Look at them: this is the shame of the country. People without a conscience. Traitors,” he wrote.
Following the tweet, the Investigative Committee announced that Navalny had posted “deliberately false information discrediting the honor and dignity” of a World War II veteran.
Also on rt.com Moscow officials deny conditions at post-protest detention centers are overcrowded as journalist live-blogs time behind barsLyudmila Nefedova, the spokesperson for the prosecutor’s office in Moscow, accused Navalny of causing Artemenko “moral harm.”
The case was originally due to be heard in August but was postponed after the opposition figure flew to Berlin to receive treatment for an apparent poisoning. If found guilty, Navalny could receive a fine of up to a million rubles ($13,200) or 240 hours of community service.
While some claim they were genuinely outraged by Navalny’s statement, others have said that he is being unfairly targeted in an attempt to be painted as unpatriotic.
Navalny was remanded in custody on January 18, immediately after arriving back in Russia from Germany, where he spent almost five months convalescing after what he claims was a Kremlin-ordered attempt on his life. The accusation has been strongly denied by Moscow.
On February 2, Navalny was sentenced to three-and-a-half years behind bars, minus 10 months already served, for a 2014 embezzlement charge. His supporters believe the case to be politically motivated, and the original decision was condemned by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) as “arbitrary and manifestly unreasonable.”
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