Inside Alexei Navalny’s hellhole ‘Polar Wolf’ jail known for ‘torture & beatings’ as he breaks silence after vanishing

10 months ago 4
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FIERCE Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny was found in a horror Siberian prison on Christmas Day after he vanished 20 days ago.

The jailed opposition leader, 47, was finally tracked down in a hellhole Siberian “Polar Wolf” jail allegedly known for torturing and beating prisoners.

Reuters
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny on video link from the IK-2 penal colony in Pokrov in May last year[/caption]
Inside harsh Arctic jail Polar Wolf - officially called IK-3 in Kharp village - where Putin’’s leading foe Alexei Navalny, 47, has been moved, a penal colony notorious for beatings, torture, and ‘breaking’ inmates including political prisoners.Russia’s brutal ‘Polar Wolf’ jail above the arctic circle

Navalny, Vladimir Putin’s number one enemy, has spoken out for the first time since his disappearance.

He said on Tuesday he is “fine” but had endured a “pretty exhausting” transfer to the freezing and remote colony beyond the Arctic Circle.

Navalny, who suffered a serious health problem in jail before disappearing, was tracked down to the IK-3 penal colony in Kharp, about 1,200 miles north east of Moscow

“Don’t worry about me. I’m fine. I’m totally relieved that I’ve finally made it,” Navalny wrote on X, formerly Twitter.

“I’m still in a good mood, as befits a Santa Claus,” he said, managing to make light of the situation as he joked about his winter clothing and beard.

His spokeswoman Kira Yarmysh said on Tuesday: “We have found Alexei Navalny.

“He is now in IK-3 in the settlement of Kharp in the Yamalo-Nenets Autonomous District. His lawyer visited him today.

“Alexei is doing well.”

The district of Kharp, home to about 5,000 people, is located above the Arctic Circle.

It is “one of the most northern and remote colonies,” Ivan Zhdanov, who manages Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation, said.

He described conditions as “harsh” – with very little contact to the outside world.

The jail is also known to locals as “the end of the world”.

“From the very beginning, it was clear that authorities wanted to isolate Alexei, especially before the elections,” Zhdanov said.

Zhdanov said Navalny’s supporters sent 618 requests for information about the location of the political leader – who had previously been held at a hellish gulag 145 miles east of Moscow.

Navalny’s supporters, who had been preparing for his potential transfer to a “special regime” colony – the harshest in Russia’s prison system – said he hadn’t been seen by his lawyers since December 6.

Ex-inmate Mikhail said that soon after entering Navalny’s new jail “they hit you with all their might on the head, neck, back, wherever they can. 

“It’s impossible to dodge, the line of guards is dense, and everyone is beating.”

The penal colony staff explained that inmates are – illegally – beaten because “the prisoner must understand from the first minutes where he ended up”, but then the torture continues.

Prisoners were beaten with batons, choked, pepper-sprayed, tied up, forced into awkward positions, and subjected to ‘humiliating procedures’, he said. 

After such abuse, one of the prisoners cut his veins. 

All  the prisoners from his detachment were “forced to undress and go out half naked into the cold. 

“There they were sprayed with water from a fire hose.”

Navalny continued to joke about the icy new prison he’d been moved to: “I have a sheepskin coat, a hat with earflaps, soon they will give me felt boots, and after a 20-day [rail]  journey, I have grown a beard.

“I don’t say ‘Ho-ho-ho’, but ‘Oh-oh-oh’, when I look outside the window, where first it’s night, then evening, then night again.

“I can’t entertain you with stories about polar exoticism yet, because I haven’t seen anything except a camera.

“And outside the cell window you can only see a fence standing close.”

Another former inmate said: “For the slightest transgression, you are punished – they beat you, put you in an isolation ward. 

“There is a room there, called a ‘bathhouse’. 

“For example, if you refuse to sign Article 106 [under which prisoners can be forced to work without pay], they take you to this ‘bathhouse’ and undress you. 

“There is a wooden bench there, they handcuff you to it and beat you until you sign…”

He said: “There is a road there, on both sides of which there is a cemetery.  

“Read the word Kharp – [the village name] in reverse and you will understand what they turn people into.”

In Russian it means “dust”.

“I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy.”

Lawyer Vera Goncharova said conditions are little different from notorious jail IK-18 – or Polar Owl, a jail for life-term inmates – located in the same village.

“It is the same as all colonies for ‘lifers’, where they walk around bent, bending their body 90 degrees,  and they put a bag over their head when they take a prisoner out, so that he does not understand how the territory of the institution is built”

Inmates spend “almost all the time in their cells”, she said.

“It’s a very hard life, a very closed institution, maximum difficulties for a lawyer to access, maximum isolation.”

Navalny’s spokeswoman Kira Yarmysh said: “They deliberately sent [Navalny] to this particular colony precisely in order to isolate Alexei as much as possible, so as not to give him any opportunity to communicate with the outside world….

“This is all happening precisely because Alexei, despite the fact that he is in prison, is still the main opponent of Vladimir Putin….

“It is not surprising that they began to transfer him to another colony right now, so that he could not interfere with Putin’s campaign [for the March presidential election].”

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