Navalny faces trial again on Friday to hear whether he has been found guilty of a series of extremism charges that could see him spend 20 more years behind bars. He is already serving a nine-year sentence in a maximum-security prison for «embezzlement», a charge that his supporters say was trumped up in retaliation for challenging President Vladimir Putin. Navalny said he expected the court to hand him a lengthy, «Stalinist» prison sentence of about 18 years, and called on his supporters to resist Putin's rule in a statement Thursday.
«Please consider and realise that by jailing hundreds, Putin is trying to intimidate millions,» he said. Navalny has a huge following on social media, where he has posted videos exposing alleged corruption among Russia's elite and mobilised massive anti-government protests. His court hearing on Friday will be held behind closed doors at the IK-6 penal colony, a maximum-security prison some 250 kilometres (155 miles) east of Moscow, where the 47-year-old has been serving his sentence.
Prosecutors allege that Navalny created an organisation that undermined public security by carrying out «extremist activities». His Anti-Corruption Foundation, that investigates graft among Russian officials, was banned for extremism in 2021. His former chief of staff Leonid Volkov and other associates have also been charged with organising or participating in an «extremist community».
Most of his close allies have fled the country. Since launching full-scale hostilities against Ukraine last year, Russia has further cracked down on dissenting voices, pushing most of the country's beleaguered opposition movement abroad. — Punishment cell — Navalny's last days before the verdict have been spent in a punishment
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