Navalny’s decade
From mayoral candidate to Russia’s premiere political prisoner. A photo gallery

On 4 August, the Moscow City Court is expected to sentence Russian opposition politician Alexey Navalny on extremism charges. The prosecution has requested a 20-year sentence in one of the most restrictive types of prison. There is no doubt that the court will find Navalny guilty: he is a personal enemy of the Russian authorities and Vladimir Putin himself. The Russian President has never dared to call his opponent by name, although Navalny has repeatedly provided them with reasons to do so: over the past 10 years, his political career has taken many incredible turns. In 2013, Navalny was Moscow Mayor Sergey Sobyanin’s main rival and came in second in the mayoral elections. A decade later, Navalny finds himself the regime’s most famous political prisoner. In today’s photo gallery, Novaya-Europe looks back at some of the milestones in Alexey Navalny’s political life.

‘Do you still need this war?’
A Russian teenager sentenced to six years for attempting to set fire to a military recruitment office speaks out in court

Summoning the leader
Why has the Kremlin decided to reinstate Putin’s annual live call-in event this year?

‘For the Putin regime, Muslims are now a very enticing prospect’
Social anthropologist and North Caucasus expert Denis Sokolov gives his analysis of last Sunday’s anti-Semitic riot in Dagestan

Never again… until now
The anti-Semitic riot in Dagestan has undermined the claims of religious harmony made by Russia’s religious leaders

Hallow gestures
Russian officials are attempting to supplant Halloween with a more Slavic but totally invented Pumpkin Feast

Unusual suspects
Migrants, soldiers, the LGBT community, and anyone critical of the war have all come under closer scrutiny by Russian prosecutors in the past year and a half

A losing battle worth the fight
Why Russian voters shouldn’t simply boycott next year’s sham presidential election

A woman who knew no fear
An anti-war activist in the city of Ivanovo, northeast of Moscow, dies in unexplained circumstances

‘My son couldn’t have lived differently’
A St. Petersburg region minor who suffers from an incurable disease is facing up to 15 years in jail for the attempted arson of a military recruitment office


