Who is Ilya Yashin and why is he angry about the swap deal getting him out of Russia?

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Yashin is a prominent politician and had become quite well-known for his vocal criticism of President Vladimir Putin. He said he viewed the exchange “as an illegal expulsion from Russia against my will” read more

Who is Ilya Yashin and why is he angry about the swap deal getting him out of Russia?

Russian dissident Ilya Yashin attends a press conference after being freed in a multi-country prisoner swap in Bonn, Germany, August 2, 2024. Reuters

Ilya Yashin, a prominent Russian opposition activist, was released from a prison in his country in the prisoner swap on Thursday (August 1).

However, he expressed intense frustration at being deported from Russia, which he said happened against his will.

Who is Ilya Yashin?

Yashin was a prominent politician, and a staunch ally of Alexei Navalny- another opposition leader who died in a Russian prison. He was a member of the Moscow municipal council, and had become quite well-known for his vocal criticism of President Vladimir Putin.

This position led to his arrest in 2022. He was sentenced to 8.5 years imprisonment for criticising Putin’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Ahead of the exchange, he wasn’t told he was being freed in the prisoner swap.

The exchange, the largest since the Cold War, involved the exchange of eight Russians, including a convicted murderer, for 16 prisoners held in Russian and Belarusian jails, many of whom were dissidents. Western leaders celebrated the deal, especially given the precarious situations faced by the dissidents after the death of politician Alexei Navalny in jail last year.

Why is Ilya Yashin frustrated about the swap?

Yashin said that he had not agreed to be deported. “From my first day behind bars, I said I was not willing to be a part of any exchanges,” Yashin declared at an emotional news conference in Bonn on Friday (August 2).

“I’m not viewing what happened to me … as an exchange. I’m viewing it as an expulsion from Russia, an illegal expulsion from Russia against my will. And I’ll say frankly, as it is: The thing I want the most right now is to go home."

Yashin argued that there were others in greater need of medical care who should have been prioritised. He pledged to continue his work “for Russia” from abroad, although he admitted, “I don’t yet know how.”

His anger was not directed at the Western governments that had secured his release, whom he acknowledged faced a difficult moral dilemma, but at the Kremlin for expelling him, a political rival, against his will.

With inputs from agencies

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