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The death of Alexei Navalny in a Russian prison in the Arctic this February sparked an outcry around the world. He was compared to Nelson Mandela as a prisoner of conscience. While behind bars, he completed a memoir, documenting his three-year battle to survive the unspeakable prison conditions.
This is our third story on Navalny – the first in 2017 when he stood up to Vladimir Putin by running against him for president of Russia. When he was arrested in 2021, Navalny’s popularity as the most prominent leader of the Putin opposition was growing.
Alexei Navalny speaking in Russian (English translation): Putin is a thief and the head of the entire corrupt system!
He was defiant, brave for taking on the all-powerful Vladimir Putin out in the open, denouncing him as a gangster. He refused to back down and paid the ultimate price: three years in Russian prisons and then this year, death at age 47.
His wife Yulia, once her husband’s silent partner, is now the leader of his opposition movement. She says Alexei’s memoir, “Patriot,” represents his final act of defiance.
Yulia Navalnaya: It was his life. It was his every-minute job to fight with Putin’s regime.
Lesley Stahl: And now he’s fighting from the grave.
Yulia Navalnaya: I would prefer he would fight not from the grave. And of course, it’s very tough to– for me to say like this. But we can say so.
60 Minutes
Over the summer, a Russian court issued an arrest warrant for her.
Lesley Stahl: It’s a dangerous place to be.
Yulia Navalnaya: I don’t care at all.
Lesley Stahl: You’re not afraid?
Yulia Navalnaya: No, not really. Why should I be infra– afraid?
Lesley Stahl: They could kidnap you. They could try to poison you.
Yulia Navalnaya: They could. But I don’t want to live my life and to spend my life everyday thinking about if they kidnap me today or tomorrow, if they are going to poison me today or tomorrow. I’m not thinking about poisoning–
Lesley Stahl: You know who you sound like? You sound like Alexei. (laugh) He would say the same thing.
Yulia Navalnaya: Of course! I’ve been living with him more than 25 years.
In that time, Alexei, trained as a lawyer, became Russia’s most famous anti-corruption activist and investigator, posting his findings online about bribes and kickbacks and evidence of the wealth Putin and his cronies had — as Navalny said — stolen from the Russian people.
Lesley Stahl (in 2017): I mean, you’re goading them.
Alexei Navalny (in 2017): These are people who are trying to steal my country and I’m strongly disagree with it. I’m not going to be, you know, a kind of speechless person right now. I’m not going to keep silent.
He called Putin “a madman” who was “sucking the blood out of Russia,” and more insults as he built a pro-democracy movement, opening offices all across Russia.
It was a time when other Putin opponents were dying in suspicious suicides, a car bombing, dissident Boris Nemtsov was shot out in the open near the Kremlin. And Navalny himself was subjected to multiple arrests and beatings, an attack with green dye laced with a caustic chemical, and in 2020, an assassination attempt that he recounts in the beginning of his book.
He writes that shortly before he boarded a plane in Siberia, he was poisoned with a Soviet-era, military-grade nerve agent.
He collapsed, moaning in agony, as his body began to shut down. While he was in a coma at a Russian hospital, Yulia waged a campaign to pressure Putin to release Alexei so he could fly to Germany for treatment.
We met them in Berlin about two months after the attack.
Lesley Stahl (in 2020): You have said you think that Mr. Putin’s responsible.
Alexei Navalny (in 2020): I don’t think. I’m sure that he is responsible.
He spent five months recovering in Germany — that’s when he started writing the memoir. Then, in January of 2021, the Navalnys returned to Russia.
When they landed, they were met by Russian police.
He was arrested, said goodbye to his wife, and was led away.
Lesley Stahl: This is a question you’re going to be asked over and over and over, but it’s, it’s almost the essential question: Why did you decide to go back, the two of you? You knew the danger for sure. And do you regret it now?
Yulia Navalnaya: You ask me about our decision like we were sitting together and discussing if he needs to go back, or he doesn’t need to go back. It, it didn’t work like this. From the first day of when I realized that he could recover after this poisoning, I knew that he would go back as soon as possible.
Lesley Stahl: So, it wasn’t even a debate.
Yulia Navalnaya: No.
Lesley Stahl: It was just “when do we go back?” as opposed to if.
Yulia Navalnaya: We never had any debates and of course, I would love to live all my life with my husband. But at that moment, I knew that there is just one decision which he could take. And it was his decision. And I knew how important it was for him. And I knew that he wouldn’t be happy to live in exile.
His arrest sparked protests across Russia. But far from disappearing in prison, Navalny managed to maintain a presence on social media. How – we’ve been asked not to say – but it enabled him to keep up his attacks on Putin.
Meanwhile, his team of investigators released drone footage of what they said was Putin’s billion dollar palace on the Black Sea. it was viewed more than 100 million times on YouTube.
Lesley Stahl: It must’ve driven Putin insane that he, he locked him up and he’s still getting the anti-Putin message out.
Yulia Navalnaya: That’s why he con— his conditions were worse way— from month to month.
Those conditions, Navalny wrote in his diaries, included “sleep deprivation,” “punitive solitary confinement,” almost no medical care. And when none of that broke him, he was sent repeatedly to “a concrete black hole” called the “punishment cell,” where he would remain for up to 15 days at a time.
Lesley Stahl: Here’s how he described it: he said it was a doghouse and this is the place where prisoners were sent to be tortured, and raped, and sometimes murdered. I wondered how you read those passages. I was thinking of you when I read it and thought, ‘What is she feeling? What is– how are you reading this?’
Yulia Navalnaya: It’s very tough moment to think about all this torturing place and torturing conditions, and about him, how he was laughing at these people, even while he was there.
60 Minutes
Navalny thought of his life in prison as his work, surviving and staying positive, his job.
“I know one thing for sure…” he wrote: “…that I’m among the happiest 1 percent of people on the planet—those who absolutely adore their work… I have enormous support from the people. And I met a woman with whom I share not only love but … [who] is just as opposed as I am to what is going on. Maybe we won’t succeed … But we have to try.”
Lesley Stahl: He wrote much of this book while he was in prison. He was under constant surveillance, cameras on him all the time and he managed to get the pages out.
Yulia Navalnaya: Alexei was very smart– smart, very inventive. (LAUGH)
Lesley Stahl: Let me read you what he says in the book, okay, about this–
Yulia Navalnaya: Okay.
Lesley Stahl: He says, “I had to devise a whole clandestine operation to bamboozle the guards, involving the substitution of identical notebooks.” And after that, “[we went to court] where I was able physically to pass items to someone.”
Yulia Navalnaya: It was very difficult. That’s why we have diaries from the first year, much less from the second year, and not from the third year because it wasn’t possible.
These are some of the diaries he smuggled out when he went to court, which was often, as he was tried and convicted several times on various pretexts. After each verdict, he was moved to a different prison with harsher conditions.
Last December, he was transferred to this penal colony north of the Arctic Circle.
This would be his final court appearance. He looked healthy and in good spirits, sharing a laugh with court officials. The very next day, Feb. 16, 2024, he was dead. Russian officials announced later that the cause was, quote, “not criminal in nature” and due to “combined diseases.”
Lesley Stahl: It was at the time that, that the negotiations over a prisoner swap were underway and Alexei might be one of the prisoners who was to be released.
Yulia Navalnaya: Putin realized that Alexei is so big that he’s– he could be the new leader of Russia. He could encourage people to stand against Putin. And all the things just brought Putin to this understanding that it’s not possible to let Navalny be, be free.
Lesley Stahl: You posted a message shortly after his death. You said, bravely I thought, “[Vladimir] Putin killed my husband. By killing Alexei, Putin killed half of me, half of my heart, and half of my soul.”
Yulia Navalnaya: That’s true. I can say now the same, nothing has changed.
Lesley Stahl: Here’s something else you said. You posted this on X: “Please do not forget… Vladimir Putin is a murderer and a war criminal. His place is in prison, and not somewhere in The Hague in a cozy cell with a TV, but in Russia in the same… two-by-three-meter cell in which he killed Alexei.”
Yulia Navalnaya: For me, it’s very important. I think that for Vladimir Putin, he needs to be in Russian con– prison to feel everything, what not just my husband, but all the prisoners in Russia.
60 Minutes
His political network inside Russia has been crushed. Yulia and their two children have been forced to live in exile. Many of his old team now operate out of here in Vilnius, Lithuania, and three of his lawyers are on trial in Russia.
And Yulia is constantly on the road, lobbying Western leaders to stand up to Putin.
Lesley Stahl: So, the question is inevitable. Painful but inevitable. Has Putin won? Has he shut down the opposition to such an extent that it’s over?
Yulia Navalnaya: But it’s not finished. We continue our fight. He still has millions of supporters, we can see it by how many people go still every day to his grave, how many flowers on his grave.
Produced by Richard Bonin. Associate producer, Mirella Brussani. Broadcast associate, Aria Een. Edited by Matthew Lev.

MOSCOW — Attempts to hire a hearse to take the body of Alexei Navalny to his funeral have been thwarted by unknown people, the Russian opposition leader’s team said Thursday.
Spokeswoman Kira Yarmysh claimed that drivers had been “called by unknown people and threatened not to take Alexei’s body anywhere.”
Yarmysh said she had been told that “no hearse agrees to take the body there.”
Navalny’s team also encountered difficulty hiring a venue for his funeral, which will be held at 2 p.m. local time (6 a.m. ET) Friday at the Church of the Icon of the Mother of God in Moscow’s Maryino district, where the opposition leader lived. He will then be buried at Borisov Cemetery.
Many venues claimed that they were busy, or refused the booking once Navalny’s named was mentioned, while one venue explicitly said they were forbidden from working with Navalny’s team, Yarmysh said Tuesday.
The team had initially planned a public farewell and funeral for the late Russian opposition leader for Thursday, but were told there were “no available cemetery workers who can dig a grave,” said Ivan Zhdanov, the director of Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation, on Wednesday.
Navalny died on February 16 in the penal colony in Siberia where he was serving a 19-year sentence after being found guilty of creating an extremist community, financing extremist activists and various other crimes in August. He was already serving sentences of 11-and-a-half years in a maximum security facility on fraud and other charges he had always denied and claimed were politically motivated.
The Russian prison service said Navalny “felt unwell after a walk” in his Siberian penal colony and “almost immediately” lost consciousness.
Navalny was Russia’s highest-profile opposition leader and spent years criticizing Putin, who has been in power for nearly a quarter of a century, at great personal risk. His death came weeks before the country’s presidential elections scheduled to begin nationwide on March 15, which is widely seen by the international community as little more than a formality that will secure Putin a fifth term in power.
RELATED: ‘Putin is responsible’: Biden delivers remarks on the death of Alexei Navalny
Navalny’s death was met with grief and anger across the world as well as inside Russia, where the smallest acts of political dissent carry huge risks.
He returned to Russia in 2021 from Germany, where he had been treated after being poisoned with Novichok, a Soviet-era nerve agent. On arrival Navalny was swiftly arrested – on charges he dismissed as politically motivated – and spent the rest of his life in prison.
His wife, Yulia Navalnaya, has blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin for her husband’s death.
“Putin killed my husband,” she said during a speech at the European Parliament on Wednesday. “On his orders, Alexei was tortured for three years,” she added, a reference to the time Navalny spent in prison.
“He was starved in a tiny stone cell, cut off from the outside world and denied visits, phone calls. And then even letters. And then they killed him. Even after that, they abused his body,” she said, as Navalny’s team alleges the body was held in order to pressure the family into agreeing to hold a private funeral.
The Kremlin has rejected any allegations of involvement in Navalny’s death.
Navalnaya also said she was concerned that police will crack down on mourners at the funeral on Friday.
RELATED: US imposes new sanctions on Russia in response to Navalny death 2 years after Ukraine invasion
More than 400 people were detained at makeshift memorials for Navalny across 32 Russian cities, according to human rights monitoring group OVD-Info.
(The-CNN-Wire & 2023 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved.)
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Washington — President Joe Biden on Friday blamed Russian President Vladimir Putin for the reported death of Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny, saying he was “outraged” but “not surprised” by the news.
“Make no mistake, Putin is responsible for Navalny’s death,” Mr. Biden said from the White House, adding that is was “more proof of Putin’s brutality.”
Navalny died in a Russian penal colony, prison authorities said Friday. The prison authority said Navalny “felt unwell” after going for a walk on Friday and “almost immediately” lost consciousness. Resuscitation measures were attempted, but emergency doctors confirmed his death. He had survived at least two previous suspected poisoning attempts.
When asked whether Navalny, Russia’s most prominent opposition leader, was assassinated, Mr. Biden replied, “We don’t know exactly what happened.”
“But there is no doubt that the death of Navalny was a consequence of something that Putin and his thugs did,” he said.
Mr. Biden said Navalny was a “powerful voice for the truth,” who “bravely stood up to the corruption” of Putin’s government.
He accused Putin of having Navalny poisoned, arrested and held in isolation, and said it didn’t stop Navalny “from calling out all those lies.” The president noted that Navalny might have lived out his life “safely in exile,” but instead returned to Russia because of his belief in his country and his people, even though he knew he might be imprisoned or killed.
Vice President Kamala Harris, who is in Germany for the Munich Security Conference, said if the reports of his death were confirmed, “this would be a further sign of Putin’s brutality. Whatever story they tell, let us be clear: Russia is responsible.”
Secretary of State Antony Blinken also blamed Putin and said that if the reports are accurate, “[Navalny’s] death in a Russian prison and the fixation and fear of one man only underscores the weakness and rot at the heart of the system that Putin has built. Russia is responsible for this.”
Mr. Biden also invoked Russia’s war against Ukraine, saying Navalny’s death “reminds us of the stakes of this moment,” and he urged Congress to provide more funding to its ally.
“We have to provide the funding so Ukraine can keep defending itself against Putin’s vicious onslaughts and war crimes,” he said. “There was a bipartisan Senate vote that passed overwhelmingly in the United States Senate to fund Ukraine. Now, as I’ve said before, and I mean this in a literal sense, history is watching. History is watching the House of Representatives.”
The president also criticized former President Donald Trump, who recently said he would allow Russia to invade NATO allies that haven’t paid 2% of their gross domestic product to the mutual defense pact.
“This is an outrageous thing for a president to say. I can’t fathom,” Mr. Biden said. “As long as I’m president, America stands by our sacred commitment to our NATO allies, as they have stood by their commitments to us repeatedly.”

Alexey Navalny, a potent political foe of Russian President Vladimir Putin who survived at least two suspected poisonings, has died in a Russian penal colony, Russian prison authorities said Friday. The Office of the Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia for the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous District reported his death, saying he “felt unwell” after going for a walk on Friday and “almost immediately” lost consciousness.
“Medical workers from the institution arrived immediately and an emergency medical team was called. All necessary resuscitation measures were carried out, but did not yield positive results,” the prison authority said in a statement. “Emergency doctors confirmed the death of the convict.”
“For more than a decade, the Russian government, Putin, persecuted, poisoned and imprisoned Alexei Navalny and now, reports of his death,” U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said Friday. “If these reports are accurate, our hearts go out to his wife and his family. Beyond that, his death in a Russian prison and the fixation and fear of one man only underscores the weakness and rot at the heart of the system that Putin has built. Russia is responsible for this. We’ll be talking to the many other countries concerned about Alexei Navalny, especially if these reports bear out to be true,” Blinken said.
Navalny’s spokesperson, Kira Yarmysh, said her team was unable to confirm the information from the prison service.
“The Federal Penitentiary Service of Russia in the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous Okrug is spreading the news of Alexey Navalny’s death in IK-3. We have no confirmation of this yet. Alexey’s lawyer is currently on his way to Kharp. As soon as we have some information, we will report on it,” Yarmysh said on social media. The IK-3 penal colony is about 1,200 miles from Moscow, in Russia’s remote, far north Urals region.
Leonid Volkov, the Chief of Staff for Navalny, said on social media that his team had “no reason to believe state propaganda. If this is true, then it’s not ‘Navalny died,’ but ‘Putin killed Navalny,’ and only that. But I don’t trust them one penny.”
Contributor/Getty
Navalny made an appearance in a Russian court via video link on Thursday, where, according to local media, he appeared cheerful and healthy. Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said Friday that Putin had been briefed on Navalny’s death, and told journalists that “it should be up to the medics to clarify” the cause.
White House National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan said Friday that it would be a “terrible tragedy” if Navalny’s death was confirmed, and that it would raise questions about what happened to him. He said the U.S. government was still seeking information, and it would determine what comes next based on the full picture.
Alexey Navalny, 47, was the most outspoken critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s government before he was imprisoned in Russia in 2021. He was initially handed a nine-year sentence in a high-security prison about 150 miles east of Moscow for parole violations, fraud, and contempt of court when he was convicted of promoting “extremism.” That sentence was extended by 19 years in August 2023.
Navalny and many outside observers have always considered the charges against him retaliation for his criticism of Putin and the Kremlin’s policies, both foreign and domestic. The U.S. State Department also considered his prosecution and imprisonment “politically motivated.”
Navalny criticized Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine. Just a month after it started, he slammed Putin as a “madman” who had launched a “stupid war” and said Russia’s leaders would “burn in hell” for their actions.
He was born in 1976 in Butyn, a village west of Moscow, and grew up in a town about 60 miles from the capital city. In 1997, he graduated with a law degree from Peoples’ Friendship University of Russia in Moscow and spent a year in the U.S. as a Yale world fellow in 2010.
Around that time, he began his public opposition to the Kremlin.
Navalny unsuccessfully ran for mayor of Moscow in 2013, denouncing an election he said was rigged by his opponent, a Putin ally. He described the Russian president’s party as one of “crooks and thieves,” which became a rallying cry for his millions of Twitter and YouTube followers and a thorn in Putin’s side.
He attempted to challenge Putin in the country’s 2018 presidential election, but the Kremlin barred him from running due to a prior fraud conviction that Navalny said was politically motivated.
Then, after he was jailed for organizing an “unauthorized protest” in 2019, Navalny suddenly became sick. Russian doctors called his illness “contact dermatitis,” but Navalny and his personal doctor suspected he had been poisoned. Two years earlier, he had been assaulted with a green dye that left a serious chemical burn in his right eye.
Speaking to “60 Minutes” that year, he wondered why he was still alive.
“Maybe they missed their good timing for it when I was less famous,” Navalny said.
Then, in the summer of 2020, the anti-corruption activist plunged into fits of agony while on a flight. His plane was forced to make an emergency landing in Siberia. Initially, Navalny — who had fallen into a coma — was not permitted to leave the country. Russia said it was purely a medical decision, but his team feared the worst.
After 48 hours, the Kremlin allowed Navalny to be flown by air ambulance to a hospital in Berlin known for its experience with victims of poison attacks. There, doctors confirmed he had been poisoned with Novichok, a highly toxic nerve agent said to be 10 times more potent than sarin gas.
After making a dramatic recovery, Navalny blamed Putin for the attack, telling “60 Minutes” that he was “sure he’s responsible.”
Despite the danger, in January 2021, Navalny decided to return to Russia, which denied any involvement in his illness. Upon his return, he was detained at a Moscow airport and charged with violating the terms of a previous suspended sentence for failing to check in with prison officials while in Germany. Tens of thousands of people took to the streets to demand his release, according to The Associated Press.
A Russian court remanded him to serve the remaining 32 months of that sentence.
“My life isn’t worth two cents, but I will do everything I can so that the law prevails,” Navalny said at the time.
While in prison, he went on a 24-day hunger strike — a protest over a perceived lack of proper medical care. He ended the strike after he said he had been examined by non-prison doctors. Thousands of people again took to the street to support him.
In April 2021, his wife Yulia told “60 Minutes” that no matter what came next for her husband, “Alexey has already won.”
“He survived this horrible poisoning and returned to Moscow to face those who tried to murder him,” she said. “Putin knows it. His advisers, his friends, his government, everybody in his inner circle know it.”
In March 2022, Navalny was found guilty of fraud and contempt of court and sentenced to nine additional years of detention in a penal colony in a high-security prison. He again decried the charges as baseless and politically motivated.
In August 2023, a court added another 19 years to his sentence, and a few months later, Navalny was transferred to a high-security prison with a reputation for abuse — known as the “torture conveyor belt” — which raised further concerns about his safety.
“Without public protection, Alexey will be face to face with those who have already tried to kill him, and nothing will stop them from trying again,” his spokeswoman, Yarmysh, said after the court’s decision in March. “Therefore, we are now talking not only about Alexey’s freedom, but also about his life.”
In December 2023, Navalny’s supporters said they lost touch with him for two weeks as he was apparently being moved to another site in Russia’s prison system, heightening already serious concerns about his welfare.
Navalny is survived by his wife, Yulia, and their two children, Daria and Zakhar.

Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny on Tuesday said he was “fine” after a “pretty exhausting” 20-day transfer from his prison near Moscow to a penal colony beyond the Arctic Circle.
Navalny’s supporters said on Monday that the Kremlin critic, whose whereabouts had been unknown for more than two weeks, was now in the penal colony in Russia’s far north and had been visited by his lawyer.
EVGENIA NOVOZHENINA / REUTERS
“Don’t worry about me. I’m fine. I’m totally relieved that I’ve finally made it,” Navalny wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter. “I’m still in a good mood, as befits a Santa Claus,” referring to his winter clothing and a beard he grew during his journey.
“I now have a sheepskin coat, an ushanka hat (a fur hat with ear-covering flaps), and soon I will get valenki (a traditional Russian winter footwear),” he added.
On his personal channel on the social media venue Telegram he wrote Tuesday that, “I now live beyond the Arctic Circle. In the village of Kharp on Yamal.”
“They brought me in on Saturday evening,” he said. “And they were transporting with such precautions and along such a strange route (Vladimir – Moscow – Chelyabinsk – Yekaterinburg – Kirov – Vorkuta – Kharp) that I did not expect that anyone would find me here until mid-January. Therefore, I was very surprised when yesterday the cell doors were opened with the words: ‘You have a lawyer.’ He told me that you had lost me, and some were even worried. Thank you very much for your support!
He said he had seen little of his surroundings except for a snow-covered adjoining cell used as a yard and a fence outside his window.
“True, there are no deer, but there are huge, fluffy, very beautiful shepherd dogs,” he said.
The U.S. State Department said it remained “deeply concerned for Mr. Navalny’s wellbeing and the conditions of his unjust detention”.
Navalny mobilized huge anti-government protests before being jailed in 2021, after surviving an assassination attempt by poisoning.
He has spent most of his detention at a penal colony in the Vladimir region, some 155 miles east of Moscow.
A court in August extended his sentence to 19 years on extremism charges, and ruled he be moved to a harsher “special regime” prison that usually houses particularly dangerous prisoners.
The facility Navalny is currently in is not a “special regime” one although there is one of that category in the same location.
One major difference from his previous place of detention is that any letters will take much longer to reach Navalny since they would go through the regular postal service rather than email.
Allies said his transfer could be linked to the upcoming presidential election in Russia, ahead of which many Kremlin critics have been jailed or fled.
Prisoner transfers in Russia can take weeks as inmates are moved by train to far-flung facilities in what was known as the Gulag in Soviet times.
Temperatures in Kharp are expected to go down to minus 15 degrees in coming days.

A Russian court on Friday issued its verdict in a new case against jailed opposition leader Alexey Navalny, convicting the politician of promoting “extremism” and extending his time in prison by 19 years, according to Russian state media and his own team.
Navalny, who emerged as the most outspoken critic of President Vladimir Putin’s government before he was imprisoned, was already serving a nine-year sentence in a high-security prison about 150 miles east of Moscow for parole violations, fraud, and contempt of court.
EVGENIA NOVOZHENINA/REUTERS
The audio feed from the court — the only immediate source of information as journalists were not permitted in the room — was of poor quality, and Russia’s judiciary authorities did not immediately confirm the sentence.
Navalny and many outside observers have always considered those charges politically motivated retaliation for his criticism of Putin and the Kremlin’s policies, both foreign and domestic. The U.S. quickly condemned the verdict.
“This is an unjust conclusion to an unjust trial,” U.S. State Department spokesperson Matthew Miller said in a statement. “…By conducting this latest trial in secret and limiting his lawyers’ access to purported evidence, Russian authorities illustrated yet again both the baselessness of their case and the lack of due process afforded to those who dare to criticize the regime.”
In the new trial, Navalny was accused of creating an extremist organization, the Anti-Corruption Foundation. That organization has authored multiple investigations into the riches of the Russian elite. He also founded a network of nearly 40 regional offices that sought to challenge Kremlin-approved local politicians.
Both groups were outlawed as extremist organizations in 2021, a designation that exposed people involved in their operations to criminal prosecution.
Navalny faced a total of seven serious charges in the trial, including participating in and funding extremist activities, creating an NGO that “infringes on the rights of citizens,” involving minors in dangerous acts, and rehabilitating Nazism. He was convicted on all but the last of those charges Friday.
In April, Navalny said a separate proceeding had been launched against him stemming from the extremism case, in which he would stand accused of terrorism and be tried by a military court.
At the time, the politician said he expected the trials to result in life imprisonment.
“The sentence will be a long one,” Navalny said in a statement released by his organization Thursday, before the verdict was announced in the case. “I urge you to think why such a demonstratively huge sentence is necessary. Its main purpose is to intimidate. You, not me. I will even say this: you personally, the one reading these lines.”
The trial was held behind closed doors. Navalny’s parents were denied entry to the court and have not seen their son for over a year.
Daniel Kholodny, who used to work for Navalny’s YouTube channel, was also charged with funding and promoting extremism and was sentenced to prison on Friday, but due to the poor quality audio feed from inside the closed courtroom, there was confusion about how many years he was given.
In a Thursday statement, Navalny said Kholodny was part of his technical production staff, but that investigators had “made him up to be an ‘organizer’ of an extremist community,” and attempted to pressure Kholodny into a deal: freedom in exchange for damning testimony against Navalny and his allies.
Navalny has been put in solitary confinement 17 times at the IK-6 prison, a facility known for its oppressive conditions and violent inmates.
In previous statements, his team described how the prison administration denied him family visits and punished him for transgressions as minor as having an unbuttoned shirt.
Navalny was arrested in January 2021 immediately upon his return from Germany, where he spent five months recovering from a poisoning that he blamed on the Kremlin — a claim Russian officials have always denied.
Shortly after his arrest, a court sentenced him to two-and-a-half years in prison for violating the parole conditions of a 2014 suspended sentence in a fraud case that Navalny insists was politically motivated.
From that point on, the number of cases and charges against him snowballed, with his allies saying the Kremlin’s goal has always been to keep him locked up for as long as possible.
Following Navalny’s imprisonment, the country’s authorities launched a sweeping crackdown on his associates and supporters. Many have been forced to flee the country, while others have been imprisoned, including the head of his regional office Liliya Chanysheva.