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As A. Navalnas wrote, reprimands are issued by the seven-person commission responsible for discipline.
“When they scold me, sitting under Putin’s portrait, I remember being scolded at the Board of Education meetings during school hours. Everything is very similar,” says A. Navalnas.
“Even after two reprimands, one can be sent to an isolation cell, which is not pleasant, because the conditions there are torture,” Navalnas says.
According to Navaln, the commission responsible for discipline should evaluate about 20 more reports. One of them alleges that A. Navalnas refused to watch the video of the conference and called it an idiot, while the other reports that A. Navalnas wore a long-sleeved knitted shirt during a meeting with lawyers.
“I look forward to the reprimand, which reads: ‘She smiled widely, even though she was grieving according to the schedule,'” Navalnas concluded.
Mr. Navaln is detained in a colony near the city of Pokrov in the Vladimir region.
Last week, his lawyers reported on deteriorating health. According to them, the opposition complained of back pain and melting legs.
The Federal Prison Service (FSIN) said Thursday that the doctors who had examined Mr. Navalna also evaluated him.
The European Union on Friday expressed concern about Navaln’s health condition and again called for his immediate release.
“There are alarming reports that Alexei Navaln’s health in the correctional colony has deteriorated. The Russian government should give Navalna access to medical care and allow his lawyers to visit him,” Nabila Massrali, spokesperson for the diplomat, wrote on Twitter. UE, Josep Borrell.
He added that “the EU continues to call for his immediate and unconditional release and a full investigation into the poisoning.”
In August last year, an attempt was made to poison the most prominent critic of the Kremlin with the nerve-crippling substance Novičiok. After the poisoning, he was flown to Germany for treatment in a coma.
After returning to Russia in January, Navaln, 44, was immediately arrested and sentenced to prison the following month for violating the terms of his probation in a 2014 fraud and embezzlement case while receiving treatment abroad.
His arrest sparked mass protests and his imprisonment in February on allegations of embezzlement sparked outrage from Russian and foreign human rights groups and condemned Western governments.
Last week, Navalno’s comrades launched a campaign to free him and announced plans for “the biggest protests in modern Russia.”
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