Resisting the advice of two jailed former Yukos executives, whistleblower Alexei Navalny said in comments published Monday that he would not leave the country to avoid criminal prosecution.
Navalny
"If I leave, everything will come crashing down. So I won't do that ever," Navalny said.
The Investigative Committee last week reopened a fraud case for a second time against Navalny, accusing him of using illegal "corporate raiding" tactics to press a state company into a disadvantageous contract in 2009, when he worked as an unpaid adviser to Kirov Governor Nikita Belykh.
Former Yukos CEO Mikhail Khodorkovsky
"If it would be in the best interests of his campaign and his safety, no one would blame him for temporarily leaving the country," Khodorkovsky said through his lawyer, Novaya Gazeta reported Saturday.
Khodorkovsky's jailed partner Platon Lebedev said "There's no chance to score serious anti-corruption successes from pretrial detention."
Meanwhile, Federation Council Speaker Sergei Mironov proposed legislative protection for whistleblowers like Navalny, taking a new step toward political opposition.
Mironov did not mention Navalny by name,
The statement is an unequivocal reference to Navalny's web site Rospil.info, which monitors state tenders for corrupt practices. Confidential personal data on web site donors, earlier collected for unexplained purposes by the Federal Security Service, has been leaked to third parties. Navalny has accused the FSB of giving the information to Nashi, the pro-Kremlin youth movement.
Mironov did not elaborate on the proposed legislation.
Neither Navalny nor his spokesman were available for comment Monday afternoon.
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