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Alexei Navalny’s Moscow flat seized as he recovered from poisoning

Bank accounts also frozen as part of a lawsuit filed by the catering firm, his spokeswoman says

Alexei Navalny’s bank accounts were frozen and his Moscow apartment seized as part of a lawsuit while the Russian opposition politician was recovering from suspected poisoning in a Berlin hospital, his spokeswoman has said.

His assets were seized on 27 August in connection with a lawsuit filed by the Moscow Schoolchild catering company, Kira Yarmysh said in a video posted on Twitter on Thursday. The politician and his allies have been involved in a long-running dispute with the company.

“This means the flat cannot be sold, donated, or mortgaged,” Yarmysh said.

Navalny was flown from Russia to Berlin last month after falling ill on a domestic flight in Siberia. Tests in Germany, France, and Sweden found he had been poisoned with a nerve agent.

The west has demanded an explanation from the Kremlin, which has denied any involvement in the incident and said it had yet to see evidence of a crime.

In the dispute with Moscow Schoolchild, a Russian court in October 2019 ordered Navalny, his Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK), and ally Lyubov Sobol to pay $1.4m (£1.1m) in damages for labeling the company and causing it moral damage.

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The court told his group to delete a video that called into question the quality of its food.

Yarmuth said on Thursday the court had decided to recover 88m roubles (£900,000) from Navalny, Sobol, and the FBK.

“This is the amount it estimates in lost profit for Moscow Schoolchild because of losing a contract to provide food.”

The court could not be reached for comment. Reuters called nine listed telephone numbers for Moscow Schoolchild and got through only once, to a woman who identified herself as an accountant but hung up when told she was speaking to a journalist.

Navalny and his allies have long been a thorn in the side of President Vladimir Putin, organizing large protests in Moscow in 2019 and regularly producing videos accusing prominent political figures of corruption.

His supporters say lawsuits and police raids targeting Navalny and his foundation are part of a coordinated campaign to cripple their activities. Russian authorities deny those charges.

Guardian / Balkantimes.press

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