Russia's Navalny jokes about 'naked party' in first video link from new
prison
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[January 10, 2024]
By Mark Trevelyan
(Reuters) - Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny cracked jokes
on Wednesday in his first court appearance since being transferred to an
Arctic penal colony, but a judge rejected his latest challenge against
his treatment in prison.
Navalny appeared by video link from the "Polar Wolf" colony to which he
was transferred last month from a prison in Melekhovo, east of Moscow,
in an arduous three-week journey by road and rail.
He drew laughter from the judge when he asked on the call whether the
Melekhovo colony had thrown a party to celebrate his departure, and
whether it had included karaoke.
He later inquired if the prison department in Melekhovo had staged a
naked party - a reference to a gathering of scantily clad celebrities in
Moscow last month that caused a national scandal.
The exchanges showed Navalny's ability to find humor even in his grim
situation and to connect with the outside world despite being sent to
one of Russia's most remote and inhospitable regions.
His frequent court hearings have provided him with a platform to keep up
his attacks on President Vladimir Putin and the war in Ukraine and to
challenge and mock his incarcerators. He told judge Kirill Nikiforov,
who has presided over many such sessions, that "a tear is flowing down
my cheek" from the pleasure of seeing him again.
Navalny, 47, is serving sentences totalling more than 30 years on a
range of charges, from fraud to extremist activity, that he says were
trumped up to silence him. In 2020 he survived an attempt to poison him
with a nerve agent.
The Kremlin says he is a convicted criminal and his treatment is a
matter for the prison service. It has portrayed him and his supporters
as extremists with links to the CIA intelligence agency who they say are
seeking to destabilize Russia.
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Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny is seen on a screen via a
video link from the IK-2 corrective penal colony in Pokrov during a
court hearing to consider an appeal against his prison sentence in
Moscow, Russia May 24, 2022. REUTERS/Evgenia Novozhenina/File Photo
'LONG WAY AWAY'
At Wednesday's hearing - a transcript of which was compiled by
independent Russian news outlet Mediazona - Navalny unsuccessfully
argued that authorities had acted illegally by sending him to an
isolation cell in October for insulting a prison inspector.
Navalny said the inspector had confiscated his pen despite the fact
he was entitled to have writing materials, and acknowledged he "went
overboard" by calling the official a devil, a moron and a scarecrow.
But by the time of that incident, he argued, he should have already
been moved from Melekhovo to another detention facility after his
latest 19-year sentence was handed down in August.
The judge rejected Navalny's complaint.
The Polar Wolf colony, some 1,900 km (1,200 miles) northeast of
Moscow, is one of Russia's harshest. Navalny joked in a social media
post relayed through his lawyers this week that the temperature had
"not been colder than -32°C yet" and he was finding his early
morning exercise "invigorating".
In Wednesday's hearing he said the food was fine but he had yet to
receive any letters or telegrams.
"I'm quite a long way away," he said.
(Reporting by Reuters; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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