Putin's Russia


Russia is nominally a democratic country, but while there are elections periodically other key features or a healthy democracy are missing, for example a free press and media, a viable opposition to hold government to account and the right to protest and criticise those who exercise power in the people's name.     

Worse still those who do actively criticise the Russian Government or its President, Vladimir Putin, tend to end up in prison or like Alexander Litvinenko and Anna Politkovskaya end up tend - in Politkovskaya's case being shot dead in her apartment block by assassins and in Litvinenko's being poisoned with radioactive polonium.

So I suppose Alexei Navalny can count himself lucky that he's been banged up in jail for only 15 days to prevent his attendance at an anti-Putin rally and you can bet your bottom dollar that this news from the BBC is not being reported on Russia Today.  

Putin critic Alexei Navalny given 15-day jail sentence

BBC News - Mr Navalny led Moscow street protests against President Putin between 2011 and 2012

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny has been sentenced to 15 days in prison for handing out leaflets to publicise a forthcoming demonstration.

His imprisonment bars him from taking part in the planned rally on 1 March.

Navalny was given a suspended sentence for defrauding two firms in December. He says the legal cases against him are motivated by his opposition to President Vladimir Putin.

Navalny left the courthouse on Thursday in a police car and wearing handcuffs.

He urged his followers to attend the rally against President Putin's policies.

The law he breached is one that restricts demonstrations.

Street protests

"To ease the economic and political crisis we have to pressure the authorities. Let's go to the anti-crisis rally," he said in a video posted on his Twitter account.
Alexei Navalny says that he is being persecuted because of his opposition to President Putin

Correspondents say that although he has little chance of posing a serious challenge to Mr Putin, he had pledged to lead 100,000 demonstrators in the march, which he says is against Kremlin policies that are leading Russia into a severe economic crisis.

Mr Navalny led Moscow street protests against President Putin between 2011 and 2012.

Last year he and his brother Oleg were accused of stealing 30m roubles ($462,000;£300,000) from two companies.

Oleg was given a three-and-a-half-year jail sentence, while Navalny was given a suspended sentence that prosecutors say they will appeal against.

Critics of the Kremlin and the US say that his case is an attempt to stifle political dissent.

Since he was sentenced, Navalny has taken an increasingly defiant stance, cutting off his house arrest tag in January.
Alexei Navalny (left) and his brother Oleg were both found guilty in December

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