Kremlin doesn’t know location of jailed opposition leader Navalny, spokesperson says

Jailed Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny is seen on a screen via a video link from his penal colony during court hearings over the extremism criminal case against him at the Russia’s Supreme Court in Moscow on June 22, 2023. (Natalia Kolesnikova/AFP via Getty Images)

(NEW YORK) — The Kremlin has claimed it does not know where the Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny is currently held and it has no intention of looking into his status.

The Kremlin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov also rebuffed expressions of concern from the U.S. over Navalny’s disappearance, calling it “unacceptable.”

“Here we are talking about one prisoner who, according to the law, was found guilty and is serving his sentence, and here we consider any intervention by anyone, including the United States of America, unacceptable and impossible,” he told reporters during his daily off-camera briefing.

A lawyer-turned-politician, Navalny has been in jail since 2021, when he returned to Russia after recovering in Germany from nerve agent poisoning that he blamed on the Kremlin. In 2022, a Russian judge added another nine years to Navalny’s sentence of 2 1/2 years for embezzlement and other charges.

Navalny was being held in Correctional Facility No. 6 in the Vladimir region, about 100 miles east of Moscow.

Navalny’s team on Monday said he had disappeared from the prison camp where he is held and accused authorities of refusing to say where he had been moved.

Peskov on Tuesday claimed the Kremlin is unable to track individual prisoners.

“We have neither the intention nor the ability to track the fate of prisoners and the process of their stay in the relevant institutions,” he said.

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