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World lead­ers blame Russ­ian Pres­i­dent Vladimir Putin for the death of his most out­spo­ken crit­ic. Alexey Navalny was respected worldwide and – despite being locked up for years in a prison cell – was Russian President Vladimir Putin’s most vocal critic. That voice of dissent was silenced as Russia announced his death on Friday at the age of 47. World leaders have been quick to blame Putin for getting rid of yet another Russian who dared to challenge him. The Kremlin is describing that reaction as “unacceptable” and “rabid”. Russians will get to choose whether Putin is re-elected for a fifth term next month. The vote is already widely viewed as a foregone conclusion, given the lack of opposition voices allowed to oppose his long rule. So, who might ever replace him? What does the lack of free-speech mean for future opposition voices in Russia? And how will Russians remember Alexey Navalny? Presenter: Adrian Finighan Guests: Vladimir Sotnikov – Associate professor of international relations, Higher School of Economics University Samuel Ramani – Associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a defence and security think tank Peter Nikitin – Russian pro-democracy activist and lawyer Published on Saturday 17 February 2024.

Beyond the headlines to the heart of the news of the day. Al Jazeera gets the Inside Story from some of the best minds in the Middle East and beyond. Al Jazeera journalists and guests dissect and discuss the day’s top story.

Primary Title
  • Inside Story
Episode Title
  • Will the death of Alex­ey Naval­ny change Russ­ian pol­i­tics?
Date Broadcast
  • Sunday 18 February 2024
Start Time
  • 13 : 30
Finish Time
  • 13 : 58
Duration
  • 28:00
Channel
  • Al Jazeera English
Broadcaster
  • Al Jazeera Media Network
Programme Description
  • Beyond the headlines to the heart of the news of the day. Al Jazeera gets the Inside Story from some of the best minds in the Middle East and beyond. Al Jazeera journalists and guests dissect and discuss the day’s top story.
Episode Description
  • World lead­ers blame Russ­ian Pres­i­dent Vladimir Putin for the death of his most out­spo­ken crit­ic. Alexey Navalny was respected worldwide and – despite being locked up for years in a prison cell – was Russian President Vladimir Putin’s most vocal critic. That voice of dissent was silenced as Russia announced his death on Friday at the age of 47. World leaders have been quick to blame Putin for getting rid of yet another Russian who dared to challenge him. The Kremlin is describing that reaction as “unacceptable” and “rabid”. Russians will get to choose whether Putin is re-elected for a fifth term next month. The vote is already widely viewed as a foregone conclusion, given the lack of opposition voices allowed to oppose his long rule. So, who might ever replace him? What does the lack of free-speech mean for future opposition voices in Russia? And how will Russians remember Alexey Navalny? Presenter: Adrian Finighan Guests: Vladimir Sotnikov – Associate professor of international relations, Higher School of Economics University Samuel Ramani – Associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute, a defence and security think tank Peter Nikitin – Russian pro-democracy activist and lawyer Published on Saturday 17 February 2024.
Classification
  • G
Owning Collection
  • Chapman Archive
Broadcast Platform
  • Television
Languages
  • English
Captions
Live Broadcast
  • No
Rights Statement
  • Made for the University of Auckland's educational use as permitted by the Screenrights Licensing Agreement.
Genres
  • Commentary
  • News
Hosts
  • Adrian Finighan (Presenter)