Exiled Navalny aide warned of danger hours before hammer attack
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[March 13, 2024]
By Andrius Sytas
VILNIUS (Reuters) - Hours before an assailant attacked him with a hammer
and tear gas outside his home in Lithuania, the top aide to late Russian
opposition leader Alexei Navalny told Reuters he and other exiles feared
for their lives.
Leaders of Navalny's organisation knew they were facing "high individual
risks", Leonid Volkov said in an interview filmed on Tuesday hours
before an unidentified attacker assaulted him outside his home.
"They know that Putin not only kills people inside Russia, he also kills
people outside of Russia", he said. "We live in very dark times".
Lithuania has accused Moscow of being behind the attack. Volkov blamed
Russian President Vladimir Putin.
"This is an obvious, typical criminal ‘hello’ from Putin, from criminal
Petersburg”, Volkov wrote on Telegram. "We will keep on working and we
will not surrender."
There was no immediate comment from Moscow on the incident.
In his interview with Reuters hours before the attack, Volkov said the
death of Navalny last month in an arctic prison had inspired Navalny's
supporters to ensure that his sacrifice was not in vain.
"Alexei's death was a devastating loss, and it's a bleeding wound (in)
our hearts, but also of course it produced a lot of energy, a lot of
political momentum," he said. "It's our task and responsibility to
convert this energy into meaningful political action that would make
Putin weaker."
Navalny's followers believe he was killed in prison by the Russian
authorities. Moscow says he died of natural causes.
Volkov said he drew encouragement from initial moves by Navalny's widow
Yulia Navalnaya's to assume her husband's mantle, and from the tens of
thousands who had risked arrest by turning out in Moscow for his
funeral. The number of small private donors to Navalny's Anti-Corruption
Foundation, where Volkov is chief of staff, had risen by half, he said.
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Leonid Volkov, the top aide of Alexei Navalny, speaks during an
interview with Reuters in Vilnius, Lithuania March 12, 2024.
REUTERS/Gerhard Mey
Nevertheless, he said, the death of Navalny was a severe blow.
"The situation is terrible... It can't be underestimated - there is
no other Navalny, no spare Navalny, no other person like him,"
Volkov said.
Navalny "had quite a unique ability to frame ideas in a way that
were able to ignite millions. We don't have any ability to
compensate for this loss."
Volkov said the West was partly to blame for failing to impose
consequences on Putin for his actions. U.S. President Joe Biden had
said after meeting Putin in Geneva in June 2021 that there would be
"devastating" consequences for Russia if Navalny were to die in
prison, Volkov said.
"Do you see any devastating consequences? No. Is the West actually
able to impose any devastating consequences on Putin? I doubt it."
The task now facing the opposition was to stay united and keep
working.
"It's our job to not let it die, because it's a very important part
of his legacy. Not to let it fall apart due to internal conflicts,
or something like this", said Volkov.
"These are very dark times for us, very challenging ones. But of
course we have a very strong determination to carry on."
(Reporting by Andrius Sytas in Vilnius Editing by Peter Graff)
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