A prominent Kremlin critic, Navalny, was convicted of fraud by the Moscow Lefortovo court for allegations that he stole from his Anti-Corruption Fund.
He added: “I even had a T-shirt with this slogan, but the prison authorities confiscated it given the printed extremist.”
The Russian state-owned news agency RIA reported that Navalny, who was also fined 1.2 million rubles (about 11,500 USD), will appeal the verdict, according to his lawyer.
Tuesday’s verdict was handed down in the Pokrov penal colony by a gathering of visitors at the Lefortovo court.
While Judge Margarita Kotova read out the charges against him, footage showed Navalny as a skinny figure standing next to his lawyers in a room filled with security people. He seemed unmoved by the case and looked through some court documents at a table in front of him.
After the trial, Olga Mikhailova and Vadim Kobzev, two lawyers acting for the opposition leader, were driven away in a prison car, the RIA reported. According to the news agency, the lawyers were taken away for not complying with demands to block the road after the court hearing.
Navalny was first detained in February 2021 after arriving in Moscow from Berlin, Germany, where he had spent several months recovering from the poisoning of the neurotoxin Novichok – an attack he blames the Russian security services and Russian President Vladimir Putin himself. for.
In January, Russia added Navalny and his top aides to the “extremist and terrorist” federal registry, according to the Russian Federal Service for Financial Supervision. His Anti-Corruption Fund (FBK) was also banned by the Russian courts last year as an “extremist” organization.
While in prison, Navalny has condemned Russia’s invasion of Ukraine via social media, advocating anti-war protests across the country as “the backbone of the war and death movement,” according to Reuters.
In another tweet on Tuesday, Navalny said: “I am very grateful to everyone for their support. And guys, I want to say: the best support for me and other political prisoners is not sympathy and kind words, but actions. Any activity against it fraudulent and thieving Putin regime. Any opposition to these war criminals. “
The latest guilty verdict handed down to Navalny comes amid a growing repression of political disagreement in Russia.
According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, the law makes it a crime to spread “false” information about the invasion of Ukraine with a sentence of up to 15 years in prison for anyone convicted.
Days after ending his hunger strike in April, Navalny’s network of regional offices for his political movement was “officially disbanded”, according to his chief of staff Leonid Volkov.