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You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/world/2015/jan/05/putin-critic-alexei-navalny-defies-house-arrest-cuts-monitoring-tag
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Putin critic Alexei Navalny defies house arrest and cuts off monitoring tag | |
(4 months later) | |
Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny said on Monday he would no longer comply with the terms of his house arrest and had cut off his monitoring tag. | |
Navalny, who led mass protests against Vladimir Putin three years ago, was handed a suspended sentence on 30 December after being found guilty of embezzling money in a trial that led to his brother being jailed on similar charges. | |
He was placed under house arrest almost a year ago during the investigation but said in a blog that he was perhaps the only person in Russian legal history to be kept under house arrest after being sentenced. | |
He said he should have been released after sentencing in late December but instead was being held pending the publication of the verdict on 15 January – a situation that even the police did not know how to deal with. | |
“It is stupid to brag, but I am the first person in the history of Russian courts to be sitting under house arrest after the verdict,” he said on his blog. | |
“I refuse to comply with the requirements of my illegal detention under house arrest. The bracelet with some effort has been cut off with kitchen scissors,” he wrote, alongside a picture of the bracelet, or tag, that monitors his movements. He said he had no plans to travel far. | |
When Navalny was handed his suspended sentence, his brother was jailed for three and a half years. They had faced charges of stealing 30m roubles, (around $500,000 or £330,000 at the current exchange rate) from two firms including an affiliate of French cosmetics company Yves Rocher between 2008 and 2012. | |
Opposition figures say jailing Navalny risked new protests so he was being punished through his brother instead. The Kremlin denies influencing court decisions. | |
After the sentencing, Navalny broke house arrest to join a rally of hundreds of his supporters outside the Kremlin but was swiftly detained and driven home by police. | |
Navalny led the mass demonstrations in the winter of 2011-12 that at times brought tens of thousands of people on to the streets of Moscow and several other big Russian cities to protest against corruption and alleged election fraud. |