As my colleague David Herszenhorn reports, supporters of the anti-corruption blogger Aleksei Navalny, one of President Vladimir Putinâs most dogged opponents, described his sudden release pending appeal on Friday as a reaction to street protests a day earlier.
Video from the courtroom in Kirov, where a judge had sentenced him to five years in prison on Thursday, showed that there was applause as Mr. Navalny was set free, for the moment. An image of the charismatic bloggerâs warm embrace of his wife, Yulia â" published by Novaya Gazeta, the newspaper that once featured the work of the murdered Putin critic Anna Politkovskaya â" was shared with relief by his supporters.
The photographer who captured the hug, Evgeny Feldman, jokingly compared it to another image, of Mr. Putin embracing a citizen he is more fond of, the French tax exile Gérard Depardieu.
Mr. Navalny himself used a still frame of the hug in a post on his popular blog thanking those who took to the streets to call for his freedom, though he was careful to erase the logo of Russia Today, or RT, the Kremlin-owned network that captured the moment on video.
A Russia Today news report on the opposition activistâs release stressed that he had just been convicted on embezzlement charges and featured an interview with an analyst who claimed that âfor many in the West, the Navalny trial is just a pretext for criticizing Russia.â
Mr. Navalnyâs longtime press secretary, Anna Veduta, also shared an image of his co-defendant, Pyotr Ofitserov, with his wife.
The activistâs many fans online also gleefully shared video and photographs of him emerging from the court to be greeted by a scrum of reporters, including Nataliya Vasilyeva of The Associated Press, and a supporter with a plate of blini.
Meanwhile, as my colleague Ellen Barry noted, Judge Sergei Blinov, who sentenced Mr. Navalny to five years in prison on Thursday, was also spotted slipping out of the court, with less fanfare.
As soon as Mr. Navalny regained control of his phone, which he had handed to his wife as he was led to jail on Thursday, he thanked his supporters for pressing for his release and returned to jabbing at Mr. Putinâs government with the winning mix of righteous anger and comic jesting that has made him such a popular focal point for the opposition.
As the BBC correspondent Daniel Sandford explained, Mr. Navalny then called on his hundreds of thousands of Twitter followers to join him in using the weeks ahead, before his appeal is heard, âto whack some more crooks.â (It was Mr. Navalny who started the damning Internet meme that Mr. Putinâs United Russia Party should instead by called the Party of Crooks and Thieves.)
His tweet was illustrated by an image of Mr. Navalny pointing out from the âaquariumâ he was confined in during the court hearing, joking that even from there he could spot corrupt officials.
Immediately after his release on Friday, Mr. Navalny told journalists in the courtroom that his campaign to be elected Moscowâs mayor âwill continue because it is about our communication with the voters, not with commissions,.â But, he added, âAs to what form it will take â" in the form of a boycott or as the continuation of my election campaign â" I will make that decision after I return to Moscow and meet with my campaign team.â
Later, Mr. Navalny retweeted images of the enthusiastic young volunteers campaigning for him to be elected Moscowâs mayor in September, an office he would be ineligible for should his conviction be upheld.
Robert Mackey also remixes the news on Twitter @robertmackey.
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