#Navalny's appeal to Russians in case of his death
🎥 Excerpt from the movie "Navalny" by Daniel Rohr, 2022 pic.twitter.com/QET6hQ122V
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) February 16, 2024
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Comment in a four-partđź§µ:
I repudiate what my president says so rudely and untruthfully about Mr. Putin and his mother, neither of whom I have met (of course). The problem with Putin is hate — he thrives on it and is good at stirring it up: an unfortunate human quality but not craziness, except in the… https://t.co/EilPji9Jn4
— BJDeming (@BJDeming) February 22, 2024
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March 1, 2024, 5:02 a.m., Pacific: RUV has live coverage (autotranslated) of Mr. Navalny’s funeral.
Update, 7:58 a.m., Pacific: RUV has wrapped it up, but the BBC is still live.
⚡️A video shot from above shows a huge crowd of people chanting 'Navalny' and marching to the cemetery pic.twitter.com/kuP2Wu0hV0
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) March 1, 2024
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February 26, 2024, 5:57 a.m., Pacific: This was reported by the German publication BILD on the 16th, and could be chalked up to emotion, but I’m sure the BBC has been digging into it deeply ever since Navalny’s death was announced. It’s credible, must have legs, and they are going to push it.
Good!
Meanwhile, as a 70-year-old I so appreciate what this woman did and hope that she — and Mr. Navalny’s mother — will be okay.
In St. Petersburg, 78-year-old artist Elena Osipova picketed with a painting titled 'Stop Putin's Operations' in memory of Alexei Navalny
She was almost immediately detained by the police. pic.twitter.com/PGL62LeMfU
— NEXTA (@nexta_tv) February 24, 2024
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Featured image: Gregory Stein/Shutterstock — “MOSCOW, RUSSIA – 29 FEBRUARY 2020, Aleksey Navalny and his wife Julia Navalnaya on the Nemtsov Memory march. Russian flags are on the background. Poster with the word “our Freedom” on the background.”
