US readies fresh sanctions vs Russia over Navalny death
MOSCOW—The United States will announce fresh sanctions on Russia on Friday over the death in prison of opposition leader Alexei Navalny, as a string of European governments summoned Russian diplomats.
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s main political opponent died in his penal colony on Friday, Russian authorities said. His team says the 47-year-old was murdered.
The United States is set to announce a “major sanctions package to hold Russia accountable” and respond to the “vicious and brutal war that has now raged on for two years,” National Security Council spokesperson John Kirby told reporters Tuesday.
The United States and its allies imposed a slew of sanctions on Russia since it invaded Ukraine in February 2022.
The European Union summoned Russia’s charge d’affaires over Navalny’s death, as Belgium, France, Germany, Italy and Poland called in Russian ambassadors.
Former Putin admirer
Meanwhile, Italy’s deputy prime minister and former Putin admirer Matteo Salvini was criticized for saying it was “up to Russian doctors and judges” to determine the cause of Navalny’s death.
Navalny’s mother, Lyudmila Navalnaya, urged Putin to “immediately” release the body of her son—a demand echoed by his widow Yulia Navalnaya.
Lyudmila Navalnaya traveled to the remote IK-3 penal colony on Saturday, the morning after his death was announced, and has since been barred from seeing his body.
“Let me finally see my son. I demand that Alexei’s body be released immediately so that I can bury him in a humane way,” she said, dressed all in black, in a video published by his team.
Investigators said his body could be kept for “at least two weeks,” Navalny’s allies reported.
Navalny’s team also published a written letter to Putin by Lyudmila Navalnaya—who is not a public figure—making the demand.
The Kremlin has refused to say when the body will be handed over and Putin has been silent on the death of his main political opponent, who has spent years uncovering and publicizing government corruption.
‘Unfounded, vulgar’
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov on Tuesday brushed off Yulia Navalnaya’s statement that Putin killed her husband as “unfounded and vulgar.”
“I do not give a damn how the press secretary of a murderer comments on my words,” Navalnaya shot back on social media.
Russia detained hundreds of mourners in the days after Navalny’s death.
Yulia Navalnaya’s freshly created account on the social media site X, formerly Twitter, was suspended for 50 minutes on Tuesday, shortly after her remarks against the Kremlin.
The company then reactivated it without an explanation.
On Monday, she had posted an emotional video appeal on the platform accusing Putin of killing Navalny.
The West has accused the Kremlin of being behind Navalny’s death, which came three years into his imprisonment.
Navalny’s death has shocked liberal Russians.
AFP is one of the world's three major news agencies, and the only European one. Its mission is to provide rapid, comprehensive, impartial and verified coverage of the news and issues that shape our daily lives.