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“I love you,” the widow of Alexei Navalny said on Sunday in a farewell message in a post on social media, two days after the Russian opposition leader died in a remote jail. On Friday, Navalny, 47, fell unconscious and died after a walk at the “Polar Wolf” penal colony in the Arctic where he was serving a three-decade sentence.
Yulia Navalnaya’s post on Instagram, the first since President Vladimir Putin’s most prominent foe died. The picture showed a picture of the two together, their heads touching as they watched a performance. On Friday afternoon, Navalnaya appeared before an audience of leaders, diplomats and other officials at the Munich Security Conference, saying she had weighed coming out on stage or immediately leaving to be with the couple’s two children, deciding her husband would want her to speak.
Navalnaya, 47, said, “I want Putin, his entire entourage, Putin’s friends, his government to know that they will bear responsibility for what they did to our country, to my family, to my husband”. Western leaders paid tribute to Navalny’s courage and, without citing evidence, accused Putin of being responsible for the death. Britain said there would be consequences for Russia. The Kremlin said the West’s reaction was unacceptable and “absolutely rabid”. Putin has yet to comment on Navalny’s death.
Russian authorities viewed Navalny and his supporters as extremists with links to the CIA intelligence agency, which they say is seeking to destabilise Russia. Navalny always dismissed accusations he was a CIA asset. Navalnaya will be back in a public forum on Monday – the European Union’s foreign policy chief Josep Borrell said she would attend the EU’s Foreign Affairs Council.
While in Munich, Navalnaya met Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, who became an opposition leader after her husband, Syarhei, was sentenced to 18 years in jail after being found guilty in 2021 of organising mass unrest. Navalnaya always supported her husband in his battles with the Russian authorities, attending his many court appearances, standing beside him at rallies and waiting for release from many prison terms.
She was born in Moscow and she attended the prestigious Plekhanov Russian University of Economics. She met Navalny while on holiday in Turkey in 1998 and fell in love. “I did not get married to a promising lawyer or an opposition leader: I married a young man named Alexei,” Yulia said once. Navalny’s last post on Telegram before he died was a Valentine’s message for his wife. “Babe, you and I have everything like in the song: cities between us, airfield take-off lights, blue blizzards and thousands of kilometres. But I feel that you are there every second, and I love you more and more.”
(With agency inputs)
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