Kirill Kudryavtsev /AFP via Getty Images
Alexei Navalny, a thorn in Russian President Vladimir Putin’s side, was repeatedly attacked and jailed. When he tried to enter politics, Navalny was threatened, thwarted and poisoned. Finally, on Friday, he was reported dead in a Russian prison at age 47.
For years, Navalny was Russia’s most outspoken critic of Putin and his inner circle, publishing embarrassing details about corruption and excess as Russia’s household income per capita plunged in an era of cheap gas prices and international sanctions.
“I want to live in a normal country, and refuse to accept any talk about Russia being doomed to being a bad, poor or servile country,” Navalny told NPR in 2018. “I want to live here, and I can’t tolerate the injustice that for many people has become routine.”
Navalny told Russians they deserved better — from their leaders and in their own lives. His message of change resonated particularly strongly in Russia’s younger generation, many of whom have lived only under Putin’s influence: since 1999, Putin has been either Russia’s president or its prime minister.
Navalny rose to fame by publishing investigations that exposed corruption, using videos on YouTube and other platforms as he sought to get around officials’ efforts to limit the size of his audience. He organized mass street demonstrations, calling for political mobilization against Putin’s regime.
Many of the excesses he exposed were hiding in plain sight: luxury homes that he called the spoils of profiteering by Putin and his allies.
In 2021, Navalny released a bombshell video accusing Putin of using a slush fund to build a palace on the Black Sea. That report has now been viewed nearly 130 million times on YouTube. The Kremlin denied Navalny’s claims, calling the investigation “pure nonsense.”
In the opening lines of that video, Navalny called Putin “a petty KGB officer who now masquerades as a great spy.”
In 2016, Navalny’s Anti-Corruption Foundation published a story on a luxurious summer-vacation estate frequently visited by then-Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev — including a special house just for ducks. The story included aerial footage of the property and its three helipads, along with an explanation of its ownership by a foundation with links to Medvedev’s family.
Yellow ducks soon became a symbol of anti-regime protest — and in 2017, a huge inflatable yellow duck was among those detained by police, as security forces cracked down on large demonstrations.
A cornerstone of that protest took place in St. Petersburg, Putin’s hometown. In a sign of Navalny’s ability to inspire the public, his followers took his message to the city’s streets, chanting words that are among the most dangerous to utter in their country: “Russia without Putin.”
Navalny was frequently detained in connection to the demonstrations he organized. Russian authorities also accused him of fraud in 2014, securing a criminal conviction that Navalny called retribution for his activism. Election officials also cited the fraud conviction on Navalny’s record as justification to reject his attempt to run against Putin for the presidency.
Prosecutors repeatedly brought criminal charges against Navalny over the years; even in cases where he was able to go free, courts often attached conditions that served as leverage, threatening to limit his activities.
Last August, Navalny was sentenced to 19 years in prison over charges related to extremism.
In recent years, Putin’s regime has tightened its grip on speech and other rights even more, in attempts to quell dissent over its invasion and war against Ukraine.
In the face of those controls, Navalny’s family, his attorneys and supporters in Russia and in exile have helped get his message out — including last summer, when he used a court statement to condemn Putin’s vision of Russia.
“It is now floundering in a pool of mud and blood, with broken bones, and an impoverished, robbed population; and with tens of thousands of people who have died in the most stupid and senseless war of the 21st century,” Navalny said, according to a message his team shared online.
This story originally appeared on NPR