Moscow court upholds 19-year prison sentence for Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny

FILE - Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, is seen on a TV screen as he appears in a video link provided by the Russian Federal Penitentiary Service from the colony in Melekhovo, Vladimir region, during a hearing at the Russian Supreme Court in Moscow, Russia, on Wednesday, Aug. 23, 2023. A court in Russia has upheld a 19 year prison sentence against imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny. He was found guilty of charges of extremism at a hearing in August. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko, File)

MOSCOW (AP) 鈥 A court in Moscow upheld a 19-year prison sentence Tuesday for imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who was convicted on charges of extremism in August.

Navalny was found guilty on charges related to the activities of his anti-corruption foundation and statements by his top associates. It was his fifth criminal conviction and his third and longest prison term 鈥 all of which his supporters see as a deliberate Kremlin strategy to silence its most .

Navalny's 19-year sentence will be backdated to Jan. 17, 2021, the day he was arrested. He was already serving a nine-year term on a variety of charges that he says were politically motivated before Tuesday's ruling.

One of Navalny鈥檚 associates, Daniel Kholodny, who stood trial alongside him, also had his eight-year sentenced upheld Tuesday, according to the Russian state news agency Tass.

Navalny鈥檚 team said after the ruling Tuesday that the sentence was 鈥渄isgraceful鈥 and vowed to continue fighting 鈥渢he regime.鈥

The appeal was held behind closed doors because Russia's Ministry of Internal Affairs said Navalny's supporters would stage 鈥減rovocations鈥 during the hearing, Tass said, adding that Navalny appeared via videolink.

The politician is serving his sentence in a maximum-security prison, Penal Colony No. 6, in the town of Melekhovo, about 230 kilometers (more than 140 miles) east of Moscow. But he will now be transferred to another penal colony to serve out the rest of his sentence, according to Tass.

Navalny has spent months in a tiny one-person cell called a 鈥減unishment cell鈥 for purported disciplinary violations. These include an alleged failure to button his prison clothes properly, introduce himself appropriately to a guard or to wash his face at a specified time.

Shortly before the sentence was upheld, Navalny, presumably via his team, posted about the prison conditions on his account on X, formerly known as Twitter, saying, 鈥渢he cold is the worst.鈥 Referring to the solitary confinement cells, Navalny said inmates are given special cold prison uniforms so that they cannot get warm.

is President Vladimir Putin鈥檚 fiercest foe and has exposed official corruption and organized major anti-Kremlin protests. He was arrested in January 2021 upon returning to Moscow after recuperating in Germany from nerve agent poisoning that he blamed on the Kremlin.

Navalny鈥檚 allies said the extremism charges retroactively criminalized all of the anti-corruption foundation鈥檚 activities since its creation in 2011. In 2021, Russian authorities outlawed the foundation and the vast network of Navalny鈥檚 offices in Russian regions as extremist organizations, exposing anyone involved to possible prosecution.

At the time that Navalny received his 19-year sentence in August, U.N. human rights chief 鈥渞aises renewed serious concerns about judicial harassment and instrumentalisation of the court system for political purposes in Russia鈥 and called for his release.

Navalny has previously rejected all the charges against him as politically motivated and accused the Kremlin of seeking to keep him behind bars for life.

On the eve of the verdict in August, Navalny released a statement on social media, presumably through his team, in which he said he expected his latest sentence to be 鈥渉uge 鈥 a Stalinist term.鈥 Under the Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, millions of people were branded 鈥渆nemies of the state,鈥 jailed and sometimes executed in what became known as the 鈥淕reat Terror.鈥

In his August statement, Navalny called on Russians to 鈥減ersonally鈥 resist and encouraged them to support political prisoners, distribute flyers or go to a rally. He told Russians that they could choose a safe way to resist, but he added that 鈥渢here is shame in doing nothing. It鈥檚 shameful to let yourself be intimidated.鈥

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