BFF-04 Police search Navalny’s Moscow flats, office ahead of fresh rallies

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BFF-04

RUSSIA-POLITICS-OPPOSITION-NAVALNY

Police search Navalny’s Moscow flats, office ahead of fresh rallies

MOSCOW, Jan 28, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – Russian authorities ramped up pressure on
the opposition Wednesday, searching the apartments and offices of jailed
Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny ahead of new protests called for the weekend to
demand his release.

Ivan Zhdanov, the head of Navalny’s FBK Anti-Corruption Foundation, said
police were searching flats linked to Navalny and the foundation’s offices
for alleged violations of coronavirus restrictions.

Russia’s Interior Ministry said Wednesday it had launched a criminal probe
into the violation of sanitary and epidemiological measures during a Moscow
protest that saw thousands rally in support of Navalny on Saturday.

The ministry’s spokeswoman Irina Volk said the organisers and participants
of the rally “created a threat of the spread of the novel coronavirus
infection”.

Zhdanov said on Twitter that Navalny’s wife Yulia was at one of the
apartments and posted a video from inside where loud hammering could be heard
outside the door.

“They are not letting in my lawyer. They broke my door in,” Yulia
Navalnaya yelled to journalists from out of her apartment window, an AFP
journalist reported.

— ‘Violation of law’ —

Standing outside the apartment, her lawyer Veronika Polyakova told AFP
that the police were not letting her in, which is a “violation of the law”.

Searches were carried out at the homes of several other Navalny allies,
Zhdanov added.

Zhdanov posted a screenshot from a security camera at the office of FBK,
showing several masked men there.

The foundation is best known for its investigations into the wealth of
Russia’s political elite.

Its most recent report suggested President Vladimir Putin was given an
opulent property on the Black Sea Coast costing over $1.5 billion as a gift.

The investigation was released days after Navalny was arrested on his
return on January 17 from Germany, where he spent months recovering from a
nerve agent poisoning he blames on the Kremlin.

Tens of thousands of people demonstrated in cities across Russia on
Saturday calling for Navalny’s release.

According to independent monitors, more than 3,900 people were detained at
the demonstrations while authorities launched a series of criminal probes
over the protests.

In Washington, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken voiced “deep concern”
about Navalny’s safety.

“It remains striking to me how concerned, and maybe even scared, the
Russian government seems to be of one man — Mr. Navalny,” Blinken told a
news conference on his first full day on the job.

“The larger point is that his voice is the voice of many, many, many
Russians, and it should be heard, not muzzled,’ Blinken said.

— Attack on tech firms —

Blinken’s remarks come a day after the Group of Seven industrial
democracies jointly called for the “immediate and unconditional” release of
Navalny.

Russia’s Foreign Ministry on Wednesday called the statement “gross
interference” in the country’s domestic affairs and an “openly unfriendly
step”.

Authorities also upped pressure on online platforms for failing to delete
posts calling for minors to join the unsanctioned rallies.

Protests in Russia are banned if they are not approved by the authorities,
as are calls for people under 18 to join demonstrations.

Russia’s media watchdog Roskomnadzor said Wednesday that platforms
including Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, TikTok and YouTube, could be fined
for failing to delete posts that called for minors attend to the rallies.

It added that the fines would range from 800,000 rubles ($10,500) to 4
million rubles ($53,000).

Putin for his part warned of the growing influence of large technology
companies, which he said are “competing” with states.

The foreign ministry in turn accused the US embassy of distributing fake
and provocative content and said it handed a note of protest “with a warning
that the Russian side reserves the right to retaliate”.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 0838 hrs