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VLADIMIR Putin’s number one enemy Alexei Navalny has been found after vanishing from his hellhole prison cell 20 days ago.
The jailed Russian opposition leader was found in a penal colony in Siberia and his lawyer managed to speak to him on Monday, his spokeswoman said.
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny on video link from the IK-2 penal colony in Pokrov in May last year[/caption] Navalny seen in prison via video link in October last year[/caption] Protesters gather outside the home of Russian ambassador Sergei Netshaev in Berlin on December 16 after Navalny’s disappearance[/caption]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, Kira Yarmysh said.
“We have found Alexei Navalny,” she said.
“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.”
Navalny’s allies, who had been preparing for his expected transfer to a “special regime” colony – the harshest in Russia’s prison system – said he has not been seen by his lawyers since December 6.
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.
“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 name mysteriously vanished from prison records six days after his disappearance.
Officials allegedly refused to reveal where he had been transferred amid fears he might have been shipped off to an even more brutal prison.
And there were fears he may have been executed.
According to his team, Navalny – the Kremlin’s top critic – wasn’t allowed to be seen by anyone after he fainted.
Lawyers were told they had to wait to see him until the time was right after repeatedly being denied entry to where he was being kept.
Navalny has been a vocal activist and a defiant critic of Putin’s regime – and has been described as the man the Russian president “fears most” by the Washington Post.
He was poisoned with the nerve agent Novichok in a 2020 attack allegedly ordered by the Kremlin and later jailed in trials slammed by Amnesty International.
His most recent sentence in 2022 replaced an earlier one, condemning him to serve around seven years in a more remote “strict regime penal colony“.
Previously, Navalny claimed Putin had been desperate to silence him after he and his team published a list of 200 oligarchs accused of being “directly responsible for the aggressive war launched against Ukraine“.
The list of 200 names was part of a wider “List of 6,000” Putin accomplices and Russian war enablers that angered the state leaders.
A video interview earlier this year with him revealed he suffered from mystery stomach aches and seizures – and had lost 18lbs in less than a month, sparking fears of a slow poisoning.
Most of his time in jail has reportedly been served in isolation.