The Wall Street Journal - 13.09.2019

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THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. ***** Friday, September 13, 2019 |A


WORLD NEWS


MOSCOW—Russian authori-
ties raided the homes and of-
fices of political opposition ac-
tivists across the country
Thursday, detaining some for
interrogation, seizing elec-
tronics and blocking personal
accounts in one of the biggest-
ever coordinated strikes
against the Kremlin’s political
opponents.
Nearly 200 homes and re-
gional offices in 42 cities affili-
ated with opposition politician
Alexei Navalny’s Anti-Corrup-
tion Fund were searched, ac-
cording to members of the or-
ganization and independent
lawyers. The searches stemmed
from an investigation by Rus-
sian authorities into alleged
money laundering by the or-
ganization, those people said.
Mr. Navalny’s group denies the
charges, which some critics of
Russian President Vladimir Pu-
tin call politically motivated.
Mr. Navalny has used the
fund as a platform to expose
the corruption of Russian gov-
ernment officials. The organi-
zation has crystallized into the
closest thing Russia has to a
coherent political opposition
force across the country.
Following months of pro-
tests in Moscow against Mr.
Putin’s tightly controlled polit-
ical system, Mr. Navalny led
calls this month to topple poli-
ticians associated with the
pro-Kremlin United Russia
party in Sept. 8 local elections
across the country. In Moscow,
where Mr. Navalny tried to
turn the vote into a referen-
dum on Mr. Putin, the number
of United Russia’s seats in the
45-seat city council fell to 25
from 38.
Though the city council is
relatively toothless, members
of the Anti-Corruption Fund
say it shows the vulnerability
Mr. Putin and his political cro-
nies face at the ballot box.
“The more powerful our ac-
tions, the stronger the reac-
tion,” Mr. Navalny’s spokes-
woman Kira Yarmysh wrote on
Twitter Thursday. “We’ve
never had such a massive
strike against the Anti-Corrup-

tion Fund and our organiza-
tion and regional headquar-
ters....We won’t stop.”
Critics said the raids
against Mr. Navalny’s follow-
ers and other opposition
groups appear to also be a
strike against those seen as in-
strumental in organizing the
protest movement that
erupted in July, slowly turning
into the biggest public show of
dissent against Mr. Putin for
the past several years.
Mr. Navalny, who was regu-
larly detained ahead of
planned rallies, was in the
group’s Moscow office on
Thursday, trying to reach out to

regional offices to deter-
mine the size of the raids,
“though the telephones of
many of our colleagues have
been seized,” Ms. Yarmysh said.
Opposition activists said
Russia’s Investigative Commit-
tee was responsible for the
raids. The agency didn’t answer
phone calls seeking comment.
In some cases, authorities
also searched the homes of
relatives of Anti-Corruption
Fund members.
The parents of Alexander
Smirnov, the deputy of Mr. Na-
valny’s headquarters in the
city of Yaroslavl, were awak-
ened at 6 a.m., when more

than a dozen Russian po-
lice personnel stormed their
house, taking away the family
computer and telephones, Mr.
Smirnov wrote on Twitter.
He said he himself was then
taken to court to face disorder
charges for his participation in
protests in Moscow last
month. He wasn’t reachable
for further comment.
The investigation against
Mr. Navalny’s Anti-Corruption
Fund not only strikes against
the personnel who run the or-
ganization, but also gives Rus-
sia’s Federal Security Service,
with headquarters on Mos-
cow’s Lubyanka Square, in-
sights into their funding.
“If I was sitting on Luby-
anka, I would want to know
how they’re funded, how they
get their money, who’s giving
it to them,” said Mark Gale-
otti, senior associate fellow at
the Royal United Services In-
stitute, a London think tank.
“That’s how you really bring
them down.”
The deputy of Mr. Navalny’s
headquarters in St. Petersburg
said the personal bank ac-
counts of members had been
blocked.
Other organizations unaffil-
iated with Mr. Navalny were
also targeted, including the
vote-monitoring group Golos,
and a branch of regional eco-
logical activists, said Pavel
Chikov, a human-rights lawyer.

BYTHOMASGROVE

Raids Target Putin’s Opponents


A masked officer raiding an office in Perm of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, voting in Moscow below.

59.RU/REUTERS

WORLD WATCH


Richard Ferrand, who ran Mr.
Macron’s presidential campaign,
abused his role as an executive
at Mutuelles de Bretagne in
2011, when the health insurer
decided to rent a building from
Mr. Ferrand’s girlfriend, the pros-
ecutor’s office said Thursday.
Prosecutors questioned Mr.
Ferrand until late in the night
Wednesday.
A previous probe targeting
Mr. Ferrand’s time at Mutuelles
de Bretagne was dismissed in


  1. The new probe was trig-
    gered by a complaint filed by an
    anticorruption group.
    Mr. Ferrand, 57 years old, said
    he wasn’t alarmed since the
    plaintiff didn’t bring any new ev-
    idence to the case. He added
    that he was determined to stay
    in his job. Mr. Ferrand has al-
    ways denied wrongdoing.
    —Noemie Bisserbe


TURKEY

Central Bank Again
Cuts Interest Rate

Turkey’s central bank cut its
benchmark interest rate Thurs-
day, loosening money supply for
the second time in less than
two months amid pressure from
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
to stimulate the economy.
The central bank lowered its
one-week repo rate to 16.5%
from 19.75%, citing improvement
in inflation outlook.
The decision came days af-
ter the president said he ex-
pected the central bank would
cut interest rates and bring
them below 10% in the very
near future.
—Yeliz Kazan

AFGHANISTAN

Taliban Urge U.S.
To Resume Talks

The Taliban called on the U.S.
to restart talks on ending the
18-year conflict in Afghanistan,
urging the Trump administration
to revisit a nearly completed
deal after it abruptly withdrew
from the process last week.
The chief U.S. negotiator, Zal-
may Khalilzad, remains on the
job and has continued to sched-
ule meetings with counterparts
for the remainder of September,
according to people familiar with
his plans.
Mr. Khalilzad didn’t respond
to a request to comment.
Morgan Ortagus, the State
Department spokeswoman, de-
clined to comment on Mr. Khal-
ilzad’s meetings, but said the
president campaigned on “bring-
ing our troops home, and I be-
lieve that that still remains the
president’s goal”.
The Taliban’s spokesman in
Qatar called on Mr. Trump on
Thursday to return to the nego-
tiating table.
—Jessica Donati

FRANCE

Macron Ally Faces
Corruption Probe

French prosecutors opened a
probe into the past business activ-
ity of the speaker of the National
Assembly, muddying efforts by
President Emmanuel Macron to
clean up politics in the wake of
the yellow-vest crisis.
Investigators in the city of
Lille are examining whether

MUGABE MOURNED: The casket of ex-Zimbabwe President
Robert Mugabe is taken from his home for a viewing in Harare.

AARON UFUMELI/EPA/SHUTTERSTOCK


VASILY MAXIMOV/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES

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