Navalny Confirms Imprisonment in Arctic Penal Colony: Reveals He's "Doing Great"

The Russian opposition leader says he's "relieved" that he's "finally made it." His whereabouts were unknown for more than two weeks before his spokesperson said he'd been located.

Navalny Confirms Imprisonment in Arctic Penal Colony: Reveals He's "Doing Great"
entertainment
26 Dec 2023, 12:49 PM
twitter icon sharing
facebook icon sharing
instagram icon sharing
youtube icon sharing
telegram icon sharing
icon sharing

Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny on Tuesday said he was "fine" after a "pretty exhausting" 20-day transfer from his prison near Moscow to a penal colony beyond the Arctic Circle.

Navalny's supporters said on Monday that the Kremlin critic, whose whereabouts had been unknown for more than two weeks, was now in the penal colony in Russia's far north and had been visited by his lawyer.

 "Don't worry about me. I'm fine. I'm totally relieved that I've finally made it," Navalny wrote on X, formerly known as Twitter. "I'm still in a good mood, as befits a Santa Claus," referring to his winter clothing and a beard he grew during his journey.

"I now have a sheepskin coat, an ushanka hat (a fur hat with ear-covering flaps), and soon I will get valenki (a traditional Russian winter footwear)," he added.

On his personal channel on the social media venue Telegram he wrote Tuesday that, "I now live beyond the Arctic Circle. In the village of Kharp on Yamal."

Navalny Expresses Surprise at Early Release from Detention

"They brought me in on Saturday evening," he said. "And they were transporting with such precautions and along such a strange route (Vladimir - Moscow - Chelyabinsk - Yekaterinburg - Kirov - Vorkuta - Kharp) that I did not expect that anyone would find me here until mid-January. Therefore, I was very surprised when yesterday the cell doors were opened with the words: 'You have a lawyer.' He told me that you had lost me, and some were even worried. Thank you very much for your support!

He said he had seen little of his surroundings except for a snow-covered adjoining cell used as a yard and a fence outside his window.

"True, there are no deer, but there are huge, fluffy, very beautiful shepherd dogs," he said. 

The U.S. State Department said it remained "deeply concerned for Mr. Navalny's wellbeing and the conditions of his unjust detention".

Navalny's Imprisonment and Transfer to Harsher Prison

Navalny mobilized huge anti-government protests before being jailed in 2021, after surviving an assassination attempt by poisoning.

He has spent most of his detention at a penal colony in the Vladimir region, some 155 miles east of Moscow.

A court last August extended his sentence to 19 years on extremism charges and ruled he be moved to a harsher special regime prison that usually houses particularly dangerous prisoners.