Russians lay flowers at Alexei Navalny’s grave, hail him as symbol of hope

Alexei Navalny's mother and mother-in-law were among the mourners on March 2. PHOTO: AFP

MOSCOW – Russians queued on March 2 to place flowers on the grave of late opposition politician Alexei Navalny, with mourners hailing him as a symbol of hope and perseverance the day after he was laid to rest in Moscow.

Navalny’s mother, Mrs Lyudmila Navalnaya, was among the mourners, visiting her son’s grave for the second day, accompanied by the mother of Alexei’s widow Yulia Navalnaya.

Both women, dressed in black, stood quietly at the grave, before leaving.

Navalny, who was President Vladimir Putin’s fiercest critic inside Russia, died at the age of 47 in an Arctic penal colony on Feb 16.

Supporters say he was murdered. The Kremlin has denied any state involvement in his death.

Thousands of people attended a farewell ceremony for Navalny on March 1, with some chanting his name and saying they would not forgive the Russian authorities for his death.

By March 2, the grave in a Moscow cemetery not far from where he once lived was covered with flowers left by thousands of mourners.

“He was the one who had opened my eyes to the existing political situation in Russia,” one mourner, who did not give her name, said of Navalny, who rose to prominence with blogs exposing what he said was vast corruption in the Russian elite.

“I followed all of his investigations closely. I showed them to my friends, who were not very interested (in politics). I tried to show them to my parents, but that was more difficult. I love truth, I love honesty, and I’m very happy when truth wins.”

The Kremlin dismissed Navalny’s accusations of corruption and his accusations that Mr Putin had vast personal wealth.

Navalny’s movement is outlawed, and most of his senior allies have fled Russia and now live in Europe.

Police keep watch

Another mourner visited the grave “to honour the memory of the man who has become a symbol of perseverance for me. And after what’s happened, there’s a feeling of a very deep sorrow.”

“But as horrible as it may sound, it is still pleasant to see how many people came here, and this makes me feel some kind of communion,” the mourner said.

“He was a symbol. He was a huge symbol. Despite everything, you can think of him whatever you want, but he has really become a symbol of something free and bright, of some kind of hope.”

People paying their respects to late opposition leader Alexei Navalny the day after his funeral in Moscow. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

The police looked on but did not interfere as mourners lay flowers at Navalny’s grave on March 2.

A rights group, OVD-Info, reported that 91 people had been detained on March 1 in 12 towns and cities, including Moscow. It did not immediately report any new detentions on March 2.

Navalny had been jailed on a host of charges including fraud, contempt of court and extremism.

He denied all those charges, saying they had been trumped up by the authorities to silence his criticism of Mr Putin. REUTERS

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