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Key Points
- Alexei Navalny, a fierce critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, has died in an Arctic prison.
- Russian-Australians gathered in support of Navalny following the news.
- Navalny’s team has confirmed his death but says his body is yet to be returned.

Suppers of Alexei Navalny on Melbourne’s Princes Bridge on Saturday. Source: Supplied / Mayya Simonova
Kuzmin, a Russian-Australian, claims his death was a “murder”.
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov on Saturday called statements by Western countries about Navalny’s death “rabid and unacceptable”.
“This regime has to be brought to justice one way or another, and I will be doing everything I can for that.”

Dozens of Alexei Navalny supporters demonstrated in Melbourne on Saturday. Source: SBS News / Mayaa Simonova
Slava Kitaeff, who also attended the memorial, said it felt “surreal” when he found out about Navalny’s passing.
“Part of the audience was leaving the concert in shock. The other part still didn’t know what was happening. I saw various people hugging each other and crying,” he told SBS Russian.

Veteran Russian rock musician Boris Grebenshchikov held a concert for the Russian community in Melbourne on Friday. Credit: Supplied by S. Kitaeff.
In Sydney, Navalny supporters said his death would continue to inspire others “to defend the Russian people’s right to freedom”.
“The Russian people who have suffered as a nation for a long time, must be free. But, unfortunately, power in Russia has been seized by criminals; the criminals who now have colossal power, and it is very difficult to fight them. But we need to fight.”

Supporters of Alexei Navalny gathered for a protest in front of the Russian consulate in Woollahra, Sydney, on Saturday. Source: SBS News / Images
Russians risk arrest to march in streets
In many Russian cities, people also laid flowers at memorials for victims of political repression.

Russian communities around the world are holding memorials for Alexei Navalny this weekend. A poster reads “I’m not afraid, and you shouldn’t be afraid”. Source: Getty / Michele Tantussi
OVD-Info, a group that monitors political repression in Russia, said on Saturday that more than 273 people had been detained at memorial events since Navalny’s death.
Navalny’s message before his death
“All that is needed for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing. Therefore, we must not remain passive.”
– With additional reporting by SBS Russian, and the Associated Press via the Australian Associated Press.