Jailed Kremlin critic Navalny, on protest eve, says has no plans to commit suicide

Authored by reuters.com and submitted by ChocolateTsar
image for Jailed Kremlin critic Navalny, on protest eve, says has no plans to commit suicide

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny said on Friday he wanted it known that he had no plans to commit suicide in prison, as he issued a message of support to his followers on the eve of protests the authorities say are illegal.

FILE PHOTO: Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny speaks as he waits for a court hearing in a police station in Khimki outside Moscow, Russia January 18, 2021, in this still image from video obtained from social media. Courtesy of Instagram @NAVALNY/Social Media via REUTERS/Files/File Photo

Navalny was detained on Sunday after flying home for the first time since being poisoned with what the West says was a military-grade nerve agent that Navalny says was applied to his underpants by state security agents.

The 44-year-old lawyer, in a Moscow prison pending the outcome of four legal matters he describes as trumped up, accuses President Vladimir Putin of ordering his attempted murder. Putin has dismissed that, alleging Navalny is part of a U.S.-backed dirty tricks campaign to discredit him.

Navalny’s allies plan nationwide protests on Saturday to try to force the Kremlin to order his release.

The authorities have opened a criminal case into protest organisers, accused Navalny’s allies of trying to illegally encourage minors to attend, and warned that attendees risk catching COVID-19.

Navalny, in a message on Instagram via his lawyer, said he wanted people to know he was in good physical and mental health.

“Just in case, I am announcing that I don’t plan to either hang myself on a window grill or cut my veins or throat open with a sharpened spoon,” the post said.

“I use the staircase very carefully. They measure my blood pressure every day and it’s like a cosmonaut’s so a sudden heart attack is ruled out. I know for a fact that there are many good people outside my prison and that help will come,” he wrote.

The authorities have made it clear they will crack down on Saturday’s protests.

On Friday, Moscow courts sentenced Navalny’s spokeswoman to nine days in jail, gave another ally 10 days, and fined another 250,000 roubles for what they said were illegal calls to attend the protests.

Navalny supporters outside Moscow were also targeted and Russia said that TikTok and other social media had deleted what it called illegal posts promoting the protests.

Maria Zakharova, a foreign ministry spokeswoman, said on Facebook: “When minors are being invited to (political) meetings do not expect anything good. Because children are dragged into political battles when all other options are not working, which means that the ideologues of this process are ready to do anything to achieve their goals.”

jonathanrdt on January 22nd, 2021 at 21:20 UTC »

“Just in case, I am announcing that I don’t plan to either hang myself on a window grill or cut my veins or throat open with a sharpened spoon,” the post said.

“I use the staircase very carefully. They measure my blood pressure every day and it’s like a cosmonaut’s so a sudden heart attack is ruled out. I know for a fact that there are many good people outside my prison and that help will come,” he wrote.

Heroic. Russia is lucky to have him.

ZookeepergameMost100 on January 22nd, 2021 at 19:44 UTC »

Once again, this is strategic move to use public awareness against Putin. Simply by saying "I'm not going to kill myself", it becomes a less appealing option to Putin because he would have to deal with the public incredulity of saying "huh, he must have changed his mind?"

There is literally no possible way to beat Putin through force. The only way to beat him is to turn the people against him en masse. That's why everything he's been doing is made super public. Becuase the more Russian people that are watching intently, the harder it becomes for Putin to feed them lies and the harder it becomes to to silence critics.

If Navalny dies, he is a martyr, a rallying cry, and the perfect emblem of Putin's violent corruption. If Navalny dies, then Putin is a murderer. A fact which is obvious, yet Putin goes to great lengths to deny. To lose even implausible deniability (cause plausible deniability is too strong) would be a very big hit to Putin's reputation.

CoalCrackerKid on January 22nd, 2021 at 18:51 UTC »

Navalny to world: I have no plans to walk anywhere near a window.