Three lawyers who represented the late Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny were sentenced to prison terms on Friday for alleged involvement in an “extremist organisation”.
The sentencing of Igor Sergunin, Alexei Liptser, and Vadim Kobzev—3.5, 5, and 5.5 years respectively—follows their October 2023 arrests and inclusion on a “terrorists and extremists” list, reported Reuters.
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Navalny, a vocal critic of President Vladimir Putin, was serving a 19-year sentence on extremism charges at the time of his death. His legal team played a crucial role in relaying his criticisms of the Kremlin and its actions, including the war in Ukraine, to the public. Following his death, Russia has intensified its crackdown on opposition figures and their associates.
The lawyers were accused of facilitating Navalny’s ability to communicate from prison by transmitting his messages to the outside world. These communications, according to prosecutors, enabled Navalny to lead an “extremist group” while incarcerated. The closed-door trial took place in Petushki, near the prison where Navalny was previously held.
“We are on trial for passing Navalny’s thoughts to other people,” Kobzev said, according to The Guardian.
Human rights activists condemned the sentences as a dangerous escalation in Russia’s repression of dissent.
Amnesty International described the case as a “shameful attempt to silence those who dared to defend Navalny,” highlighting the Kremlin’s increasing persecution of legal representatives of political opponents.
International outrage
The sentences sparked widespread condemnation from Western nations. The US State Department labelled the case an example of the Kremlin’s crackdown on human rights and the legal profession.
British foreign secretary David Lammy called for the release of all political prisoners in Russia, and Germany denounced the targeting of defence lawyers as “harsh persecution,” The Guardian reported.
Rights group OVD-Info warned that targeting defence lawyers risks eradicating what remains of the rule of law in Russia. “The authorities are now essentially outlawing the defence of politically persecuted people,” the group stated, as quoted by The Guardian.
The late Navalny’s widow, Yulia Navalnaya, also condemned the verdict, labelling the lawyers as “political prisoners” and demanding their immediate release. Navalnaya has previously accused the Kremlin of orchestrating Navalny’s death in February 2023—a claim the Kremlin denies, according to Reuters.
Human rights groups warn that the sentencing of lawyers defending dissidents signals a troubling shift in the Kremlin’s efforts to suppress dissent and stifle any remaining avenues for legal resistance.