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EU puts sanctions on Russian justice officials blamed for jailing Alexei Navalny
22 March 2024, 15:34
Mr Navalny, the most persistent foe of President Vladimir Putin, was serving a 19-year sentence when he died.
The European Union has imposed sanctions on the Russian justice and prison officials responsible for imprisoning opposition leader Alexei Navalny before his death last month.
“Alexei Navalny’s slow killing by the Kremlin regime is a stark reminder of its utter disregard for human life,” EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said in a statement announcing the move.
Mr Borrell said the sanctions, which target 33 officials and two prisons and involve asset freezes and travel bans, “demonstrate our determination to hold Russia’s political leadership and authorities to account for the continuing violation of the human rights in Russia”.
Mr Navalny, the most persistent foe of President Vladimir Putin, was serving a 19-year sentence when he died.
He had been behind bars since January 2021 after returning to Russia from Germany where he had been recovering from nerve agent poisoning that he blamed on the Kremlin.
The cause of his February 16 death has been described by officials only as due to natural causes.
The EU said that its measures would hit the IK-6 corrective colony and IK-3 maximum security corrective colony, including the official in charge Vadim Kalinin, where Mr Navalny had been held before his death.
“Both colonies are known for exerting physical and psychological pressure, full isolation, torture and violence on prisoners. In both places Mr Navalny suffered abuses, including through repeated solitary confinement in a punishment cell and cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment, leading to the severe deterioration of his health,” it said.
Justice officials targeted by the EU measures include Andrey Suvorov, who last year sentenced Mr Navalny to 19 years in a special regime colony, and Kirill Nikiforov, who rejected Mr Navalny’s lawsuit against IK-6 to appeal against his transfer to a punishment cell for 12 days.
It is unclear whether the officials travelled to or through EU countries or had significant assets in Europe.