Perhaps
the Russian authorities should stop treating this guy with kid gloves
and treat him like the Americans (or anyone else) would
Putin critic Alexei Navalny defies house arrest and cuts off monitoring tag
Navalny received suspended sentence on 30 December for embezzling money but was not released from house arrest
5
January, 2014
Kremlin
critic Alexei Navalny said on Monday he would no longer comply with
the terms of his house arrest and had cut off his monitoring tag.
Navalny,
who led mass protests against Vladimir Putin three years ago, was
handed a suspended sentence on 30 December after being found guilty
of embezzling money in a trial that led to his brother being jailed
on similar charges.
He
was placed under house arrest almost a year ago during the
investigation but said in a blog that he was perhaps the only person
in Russian legal history to be kept under house arrest after being
sentenced.
He
said he should have been released after sentencing in late December
but instead was being held pending the publication of the verdict on
15 January – a situation that even the police did not know how to
deal with.
“It
is stupid to brag, but I am the first person in the history of
Russian courts to be sitting under house arrest after the verdict,”
he said on his blog.
“I
refuse to comply with the requirements of my illegal detention under
house arrest. The bracelet with some effort has been cut off with
kitchen scissors,” he wrote, alongside a picture of the bracelet,
or tag, that monitors his movements. He said he had no plans to
travel far.
When
Navalny was handed his suspended sentence, his brother was jailed for
three and a half years. They had faced charges of stealing 30m
roubles, (around $500,000 or £330,000 at the current exchange rate)
from two firms including an affiliate of French cosmetics company
Yves Rocher between 2008 and 2012.
Opposition
figures say jailing Navalny risked new protests so he was being
punished through his brother instead. The Kremlin denies influencing
court decisions.
After
the sentencing, Navalny broke house arrest to join a rally of
hundreds of his supporters outside the Kremlin but was swiftly
detained and driven home by police.
Navalny
led the mass demonstrations in the winter of 2011-12 that at times
brought tens of thousands of people on to the streets of Moscow and
several other big Russian cities to protest against corruption and
alleged election fraud.
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