Kremlin digs into 'tool kit of intimidation' to try to suppress Navalny supporters - Action News
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Kremlin digs into 'tool kit of intimidation' to try to suppress Navalny supporters

The Putin government is going after jailed anti-corruption crusader Alexei Navalny every way it can, using the full arsenal of its police, judiciary and propaganda outlets to vilify him ahead of more anti-government protests set for this weekend.

Putin's pressure campaign intensifies ahead of anti-government protests scheduled for Sunday

Alexei Navalny, Russian President Vladimir Putin's fiercest critic, appears via video conference for an appeal hearing in Moscow on Thursday. (Corinne Seminoff/CBC)

AlexeiNavalny would have known with near certainty that the chance he'd walk out of a Moscow jail as a free man after his latest appeal hearing was remote.

So, instead,the Russian opposition leader used his appearance Thursday via video conference to go over the heads of his jailers and the Putin government to send a message of encouragement to his supporters ahead of rallies his team has called for Sunday.

"You won't frighten us," said Navalny,speaking directly to Russia's leaders in the Kremlin and those in charge of its vast security apparatus.

"You won't manage to frighten dozens of millions of people who were robbed by those in power.We won't allow a bunch of villains to impose their rules on our country. "

More than 100,000 people took to the streets of more than 120 towns and cities last weekend in the most extensive protests Russia has seen in decades, with the crowds calling for Navalny to be freed.

Hundreds of riot police were deployed in Moscow during a protest last weekend. Clashes with protesters were relatively isolated. (Corinne Seminoff/CBC)

The 44-year-old lawyer turned anti-corruption crusader turned politician was thrown in jail after he returned to Russia earlier this month after recovering in Germany followingan attempt on his life last summer.

He accuses the country's security services of trying to kill him with a nerve agent, and Russian President Vladimir Putin of ordering the hit.

Intimidation

However, Navalny's defiant words from the jailhouse only served to underscore the lopsided nature of the collision between him and Putin.

"The regime has barely started to unpack its vast tool kit of intimidation,"Carnegie Moscow Centre scholar Alexander Gabuevwrote in a thread on social media.

"And that's why it's wishful thinking to portray a 40k crowd in Moscow (with a population of nearly 13 million) or St. Petersburg (with more than 5 million) as a real danger to the regime."

He said if Putin's FSB, a security force and successor tothe KGB, really did attempt to assassinate Navalny with a deadly nerve agent asevidence gathered by the journalism collective Bellingcat suggests then it's hard to see how protests will be enough to convince authorities to let him go.

In the last week,Russia's government has demonstrated some but not all of the countermeasures it is deploying to suppress the Navalny-inspired protests.

On Wednesday,police raided the homes of several of his allies,including hiswife, Yulia, and his brother, Oleg, as well as the broadcast offices of his Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK).

It was responsible for producing the video Putin's Palace,a two-hour-long investigation into an opulent mansion on the edge of the Black Sea that Navalny claims was built for Russia's president using $1.35 billion US in public funds that were siphoned off by corrupt business cronies.

The video has racked up100 million views on YouTube.

Some Navalny aides,including press secretary Kira Yarmysh, were given jail terms of a week or more.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has used a variety of tactics to try to discourage the protesters from taking to the streets. (Sputnik/Mikhail Klimentyev/Kremlin via Reuters)

Russian authorities have also tried to leverage the education system to prevent young people from heeding the call to protest by threatening expulsion from schools or universities.

After thousands of Russian teenagers posted TikTok messages of support for Navalny, the Education Ministry organized meetings for parents to have their kids analyzed by a psychiatrist.

Propaganda war

The government's social media team has also been busy,pushing out hundreds of pro-Putin videos to try to suppress turnout for future demonstrations.

Some videos feature young people professing their loyalty to Russia's president while others contain apologies from protesters who expressregret for taking part in protests.

People attend a rally in support of Navalny in Moscow last Saturday. (Maxim Shemetov/Reuters)

The Kremlin has also tried to crack down on social media platforms that have posted anti-government messages.

Roskomnadzor,the country's internet censor, announced it will fine companiessuch as TikTok and Facebook for not taking down posts that encouraged people to attend the protests last weekend.

After ignoring Navalny for years, Russian state TV programs have suddenly unleashed a barrage of anti-Navalny propaganda accusing him of everything from corruption to poisoning the minds of children to repeating a long-standing accusation that he works for the CIA.

The TV stations have also been playing pro-Kremlin messages,including an over-the-toppromotional videomade by Russianretailer Sima-Land.It features staff in uniforms dancing in unison, waving their hands and professing their love for Russia's president.

It concludes with a dramatic musical flourish and the words:"Vladimir Vladimirovich[Putin], we are with you."

Threat of force

Thenthere's the outrightthreat of violence to try to deter people from taking to the streets.

At the big protests in Moscow and St. Petersburg last Saturday,police were largely restrained and the confrontations between riot squads and protesters were relatively mild at least byRussian standards although more than 4,000 people were arrested.

But the readiness to usebrutal force byheavily armed and omnipresent security forces remains a potentially powerful deterrent.

More than 4,000 people were arrested at anti-government protests across Russia last weekend. Many were issued expensive fines or short jail terms. (Corinne Seminoff/CBC)

Weaker hand?

Still,Navalny's advocates say they believe the Kremlin's hand isn't as strong as it may appear.

In an interview with CBC News, Vladimir Kara-Murza,an opposition politician who promotes a stronger civil society in Russia, said Putin's regime has relied on repression,propaganda and the passive acquiescence of society to remain in power.

"The two latter factors are no longer there. The propaganda is still [in place]but its effectiveness is no longer what it once was, and society is silent no longer," he said.

"There is only so much time the Putin regime can win for itself by standing on force alone,and that is all they have left they have lost this young generation in Russia."

Kara-Murza saidhe believes the Kremlin is most worried about Navalny's ability to mobilize people to vote against pro-government candidates in key parliamentary elections later this year.

The so-called Smart Voting tactics call for voters to pick the opposition candidate who has the best chance of winning, regardless of their party label or ideology.

The measure has had some success at the local and regional level, but the elections in September are seen as a key test.

For years,pro-Kremlin commentators have vilified Navalny for being a traitor, arguing that he's trying to provoke a "Maidan"-style uprising in Russia.

That's a reference tothe wave of protests and unrestthat led tothe 2014 overthrow of Ukraine's pro-Russialeader, Viktor Yanukovych,and the country's subsequent attempt to pivot away from Russia to the West.More than 130 people were killed in violence associated with the uprising,a spectre the Kremlin often raises to try to convince Russians they are far better off sticking with the system and the president they have now.

Russian opposition activist Vladimir Kara-Murza says he believes the Kremlin has reason to be legitimately nervous about Navalny's potential political influence. (Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters)

Other Russia watchers remain unconvincedthe rapidly changing political dynamic in Russia poses a significant threat to Putin's reign.

"Mass protests, as such, rarely achieve political changes," political scientist Ekaterina Schulmannsaid in a forum organized by the School of Slavonic and East European Studies at the University College London.

She saida more likely possibility is the protestsgradually increase the strain on Russia's political system to the point where elites within the Kremlin decide they have more to lose than gain by backing Putin.

"Coups are more common than popular revolts in autocracies," she said.

While that might offera partial victory for the pro-Navalnyforces,it would also keep the existingpower system and its built-in biases against Navalny intact.