Dubai Telegraph - Navalny memoirs spark mix of curiosity, indifference in Moscow

EUR -
AED 3.973829
AFN 71.804691
ALL 98.65401
AMD 418.777429
ANG 1.950098
AOA 986.16328
ARS 1063.666822
AUD 1.617945
AWG 1.950146
AZN 1.84047
BAM 1.954295
BBD 2.184717
BDT 129.300404
BGN 1.955775
BHD 0.407791
BIF 3141.779983
BMD 1.081912
BND 1.423603
BOB 7.477275
BRL 6.166247
BSD 1.082067
BTN 90.972926
BWP 14.445873
BYN 3.541072
BYR 21205.468078
BZD 2.18103
CAD 1.496213
CDF 3078.038895
CHF 0.936496
CLF 0.037278
CLP 1028.616868
CNY 7.703966
CNH 7.702448
COP 4633.427232
CRC 557.560222
CUC 1.081912
CUP 28.670658
CVE 110.180132
CZK 25.247163
DJF 192.682473
DKK 7.457402
DOP 65.139825
DZD 144.227219
EGP 52.651556
ERN 16.228675
ETB 130.312526
FJD 2.41612
FKP 0.827845
GBP 0.833413
GEL 2.942641
GGP 0.827845
GHS 17.371699
GIP 0.827845
GMD 75.734157
GNF 9333.810452
GTQ 8.367555
GYD 226.376675
HKD 8.409645
HNL 26.957236
HRK 7.453322
HTG 142.450275
HUF 399.990848
IDR 16842.443021
ILS 4.085704
IMP 0.827845
INR 90.96453
IQD 1417.508137
IRR 45551.186146
ISK 149.282122
JEP 0.827845
JMD 171.72693
JOD 0.767091
JPY 163.232873
KES 139.577292
KGS 92.502504
KHR 4395.614193
KMF 492.431984
KPW 973.720229
KRW 1491.664682
KWD 0.331541
KYD 0.901705
KZT 524.965635
LAK 23770.799937
LBP 96896.111698
LKR 317.305589
LRD 208.289561
LSL 19.028143
LTL 3.194604
LVL 0.654438
LYD 5.203992
MAD 10.708851
MDL 19.42204
MGA 4966.197641
MKD 61.616232
MMK 3514.006793
MNT 3676.335771
MOP 8.664466
MRU 43.031854
MUR 49.843548
MVR 16.618142
MWK 1876.263443
MXN 21.529252
MYR 4.682511
MZN 69.080415
NAD 19.028143
NGN 1777.94879
NIO 39.819328
NOK 11.819652
NPR 145.556882
NZD 1.78682
OMR 0.416479
PAB 1.082072
PEN 4.074961
PGK 4.326667
PHP 62.568574
PKR 300.47945
PLN 4.316925
PYG 8561.365877
QAR 3.945043
RON 4.973003
RSD 117.026018
RUB 104.458072
RWF 1461.074579
SAR 4.063184
SBD 8.979138
SCR 14.917024
SDG 650.773558
SEK 11.397755
SGD 1.422974
SHP 0.827845
SLE 24.716295
SLL 22687.142604
SOS 618.423647
SRD 35.935669
STD 22393.386508
SVC 9.467707
SYP 2718.335735
SZL 19.023347
THB 36.221854
TJS 11.491202
TMT 3.786691
TND 3.354416
TOP 2.53395
TRY 37.053635
TTD 7.351202
TWD 34.675251
TZS 2948.209039
UAH 44.719154
UGX 3965.945154
USD 1.081912
UYU 44.975357
UZS 13855.327666
VEF 3919281.741385
VES 42.338476
VND 27485.965129
VUV 128.446755
WST 3.030634
XAF 655.452125
XAG 0.032074
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.92392
XDR 0.811775
XOF 655.452125
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.883636
ZAR 19.021364
ZMK 9738.500096
ZMW 28.754984
ZWL 348.375106
  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    62

    +2.42%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0500

    7.35

    -0.68%

  • CMSC

    0.0330

    24.683

    +0.13%

  • GSK

    -0.1750

    37.985

    -0.46%

  • NGG

    -0.8400

    66.19

    -1.27%

  • AZN

    -0.1700

    77.27

    -0.22%

  • RELX

    -0.6350

    46.995

    -1.35%

  • BTI

    0.3870

    34.637

    +1.12%

  • SCS

    -0.0700

    12.82

    -0.55%

  • RIO

    0.3950

    65.345

    +0.6%

  • VOD

    -0.0620

    9.568

    -0.65%

  • CMSD

    -0.0300

    24.84

    -0.12%

  • BCC

    -2.0600

    135.84

    -1.52%

  • JRI

    -0.0580

    13.092

    -0.44%

  • BP

    0.0950

    31.565

    +0.3%

  • BCE

    -0.1800

    33.21

    -0.54%

Navalny memoirs spark mix of curiosity, indifference in Moscow
Navalny memoirs spark mix of curiosity, indifference in Moscow / Photo: Olga MALTSEVA - AFP

Navalny memoirs spark mix of curiosity, indifference in Moscow

There was a mix of indifference and curiosity in Moscow when late opposition leader Alexei Navalny's autobiography was published on Tuesday.

Text size:

Outside the house in Moscow where Navalny lived with his wife Yulia and two children, several former neighbours shrugged at the news.

Valentina, a 60-year-old nurse, said she was "not very interested" by the life of Navalny, President Vladimir Putin's top political opponent.

Anna, 39, an economist, also said she was "not very interested" by the anti-corruption activist and lawyer, who Amnesty International described as "a prisoner of conscience jailed only for speaking out against a repressive government".

He had "no role in my life", Anna said.

"Why should I be interested in this book since I know everything already?" Natalia, a 66-year-old pensioner, told AFP after throwing out some rubbish near the apartment building.

But others were much keener to know more about Navalny, who led massive demonstrations against Putin before he was jailed on a string of successive charges, widely seen as repeated punishment for challenging the Kremlin.

His last conviction was a 19-year sentence for "extremism".

Navalny died in February in an Arctic jail described by Amnesty as one of Russia's "harshest... following his poisoning, unjust imprisonment and torture in prison".

Outside the entrance to the home where Navalny lived from 2000 until 2010, 58-year-old Tamara shared a happy of memory of when they would walk their dogs together in the neighbourhood.

"I knew he was an opposition leader but I never got into the detail," she said with a smile, setting down two heavy bags to speak to AFP.

"His death saddens me on a human level."

- Uncanny predictions -

Elena, 41, said the Navalny couple were "positive, polite and nice people who joked a lot".

"Our children went to the same school and loved to stroke their bulldog," she said, adding that she would read the autobiography if possible.

The book, "Patriot", is not available in Russia even though it has not been formally banned.

"I would be interested to see life here through their eyes," Elena said.

Holding back tears, she added: "I feel sorry for him as a person."

Navalny lies buried in a nearby cemetery.

His funeral on March 1 drew thousands of people despite a heavy police presence.

The grave is always covered with flowers, like those brought by Natalya and Mikhail, a couple from Saint Petersburg, who said they had "not expected to see so many people still coming with flowers".

"Eight months after his death, life is even sadder," said Natalya, 27.

She said she was wanted to read Navalny's memoirs "mainly to find out more about his private life".

Another couple from Saint Petersburg, Konstantin and Anastasia, both bank employees, said they were "eagerly awaiting" the book.

"His predictions have a tendency to come true, unfortunately," Konstantin said.

G.Gopalakrishnan--DT