7 May 2018

Al Jazeera: Alexey Navalny: Putin's sole political nemesis

The demonstrations, which came just days after some 10,000 people attended a major rally in Moscow against the banning of popular messaging app Telegram, were held under the banner "He's Not Our Tsar!" in 90 cities across the country. [...]

A lawyer by profession, Navalny entered politics through the liberal opposition party Yabloko, of which he became a member in 2000. He climbed to the ranks of the party eventually becoming a deputy head of its Moscow branch only to be forced to resign in 2007 over his dealings with ultranationalists.

Navalny has not only attended the far-right "Russian march" and engaged with its organisers, but has also made a number of racist statements, including calling Georgians "rodents" during Russia's war with Georgia in 2008 and comparingmigrants to "insects". He also was the cofounder of a short-lived nationalist movement aimed at fighting for democracy and the rights of ethnic Russians. [...]

"During the [2012] Bolotnaya protests, Navalny was one of the leaders of the Russian opposition, along with Boris Nemtsov, Garry Kasparov, Mikhail Kasyanov, etc," says Kashin. "Then, it was like the nursery rhyme in Agatha Christie's novel 'And then there were none' - one by one, [these leaders] either got killed, left the country or just decided to retire from active work."  [...]

His campaign has maintained vast and sophisticated social media presence, which has emerged as an alternative source of information and criticism of the regime. It has been producing live and recorded high-quality content for YouTube and actively engaging with supporters on all major social media networks.

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