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Analysis

Alexei Navalny was locked away but still posed a threat to Putin by opposing Ukraine war as Russian election loomed

The Kremlin has been alarmed of late by the popularity of anti-war opponents who threaten the authority of Vladimir Putin.

Alexei Navalny gestures while speaking to a crowd during a political protest in Moscow, Russia  in 2019
Pic: AP
Image: Alexei Navalny speaking during a political protest in Moscow in 2019. Pic: AP
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Does the death of Alexei Navalny reveal weakness within Putin's regime as it tries to project confidence about the direction of its war in Ukraine?

Many in the West will assume Vladimir Putin ordered the assassination of Navalny, given his track record of killing so many others.

His agents tried to poison him with Novichok four years ago, after all. But Navalny was in jail out of the way and unable to pose much of a threat. Why kill him now?

Follow live - Russia-Ukraine: Putin blamed for Navalny's death

Alexei Navalny gestures as he stands behind a glass panel of a cage in the BabuskinAG百家乐在线官网 District Court in 2021.
Pic: AP
Image: Alexei Navalny behind a glass panel in court in 2021. Pic: AP

Navalny made a name for himself campaigning about Kremlin corruption. He produced videos revealing the lavish palaces Putin had built for himself and his cronies.

But he also campaigned against the war in Ukraine, and that may have been the bigger worry for Putin, not least because of events ahead of presidential elections in Russia.

Read more:

Putin critic some hoped could overthrow Putin
Navalny's wife: 'Putin will be held accountable'

The fortunes of anti-war candidate Boris Nadezhdin may have given Russia's leader a fright. He was reportedly beginning to poll in the double digits.

Alarmed Kremlin authorities responded by barring him from running, citing 'technical irregularities'.

Vladimir Putin attends a meeting with his confidants for the 2024 election at Gostiny Dvor in Moscow,
Pic: Reuters
Image: Putin at a meeting for the 2024 election. Pic: Reuters

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Peskov on Navalny

His treatment was picked up on by another very brave critic of Putin's, the British-Russian writer Vladimir Kara-Murza who is also in jail on trumped-up charges for daring to speak up against the regime.

In an article written from his prison cell this week, Kara-Murza claimed that for ordinary Russians worried by the war Nadezhdin's campaign "was not just a pleasant surprise, it was a much-needed morale boost".

He added that Russian society has been "disoriented, demoralised and increasingly repressed since the start of Putin's full-blown war on Ukraine".

People, including activists of women's movement "Way Home" and relatives of servicemen of the Russian armed forces involved in a military campaign in Ukraine, gather to lay flowers at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier by the Kremlin wall to demand the soldiers' return from Ukraine front, in Moscow, Russia, February 3, 2024. REUTERS/Stringer
Image: Women's activists and relatives of Russian servicemen call for soldiers to return from Ukraine. Pic: Reuters

Nadezhdin's campaign was catching fire, with long lines of people queuing to sign petitions for his nomination, as Kara-Murza points out, 200,000 signed up, he claims.

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Nadezhdin was never going to be a threat in an election the Kremlin controls completely but his growing popularity revealed a sentiment Putin will have been keen to snuff out.

And that may also have been the reason some will claim he ordered Navalny's death now, to silence a far more charismatic opponent and critic of his war in Ukraine before that anti-war spirit gathered any more strength.