Alexei Navalny begins hunger strike in prison over treatment

Russian opposition leader claims authorities refusing to properly treat back and leg pains

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was jailed in February for violating the terms of his probation during his convalescence in Germany. Photograph: Handout/Navalny team Youtube page/AFP via Getty Image
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny was jailed in February for violating the terms of his probation during his convalescence in Germany. Photograph: Handout/Navalny team Youtube page/AFP via Getty Image

Jailed Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny went on hunger strike on Wednesday in an attempt to force the prison holding him outside Moscow to provide him with proper medical care for what he said was acute pain in his back and legs.

The fate of Mr Navalny, one of President Vladimir Putin’s most prominent critics, is in focus after he said last week that being woken up by a guard every hour during the night amounted to torture and that his appeals for medical treatment had been ignored.

In a handwritten letter addressed to the governor of his prison which was posted to social media by his team on Wednesday, Mr Navalny said daily requests for a doctor of his choice to examine him and for proper medicine had been ignored.

“I really need a doctor. Every convict has the right [by law] to invite a specialist to examine and consult him. Even I have such a right and I’m innocent,” Mr Navalny wrote in the letter.

READ SOME MORE

“I demand that a doctor be allowed to see me, and until this happens, I am declaring a hunger strike.”

The IK-2 corrective penal colony 100km east of Moscow did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Prison authorities, after examining Mr Navalny last week, declared his condition to be stable and satisfactory. The Kremlin has declined to comment on his health, saying it is a matter for the federal penitentiary service.

Open letter

Medical professionals on Sunday published an open letter demanding the 44-year-old politician get proper care.

“We fear for the worst. Leaving a patient in this condition . . . may lead to severe consequences, including an irreversible, full or partial loss of lower limb functions,” the letter said.

Mr Navalny has said that what started out as acute back pain spread to his right leg and then to his left leg. The only medicine he has received has been Ibuprofen tablets and cream, he has said. Some members of a local prisoner monitoring group have accused him of faking his condition.

“I don’t want to lose both legs,” Mr Navalny wrote in the same letter. “It would not be fair. Everyone has two legs and I wouldn’t have any.”

Mr Navalny was jailed last month for 2½ years on charges he called politically motivated. He was arrested as he returned to Russia from Germany in January, where he had been recovering from what doctors said was a nerve agent poisoning.

The West, including the European Court of Human Rights, has demanded Russia release Mr Navalny. Moscow, which has cast doubt over his poisoning, has called such appeals unacceptable interference in its internal affairs.

The Kremlin has cast him as a western-backed troublemaker on a mission to destabilise Russia with Mr Putin’s spokesman linking him to the CIA, something Mr Navalny has denied.

Mr Navalny’s allies have announced plans to stage what they hope will be the biggest anti-Kremlin street protest in modern Russian history this spring. The authorities have said such protests are illegal. – Reuters