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President Vladimir Putin’s government is targeting dual American citizen and ballerina Ksenia Karelina for treason, as the U.S. seeks answers. Meanwhile, Russian police are arresting mourners of critic Alexey Navalny and President Biden is promising ne…
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THE FAMILY of a ballerina detained by Putin’s cronies have said they fear she could be killed inside the prison just like Alexei Navalny.
Ksenia Karelina, 33, was taken away by Russia’s FSB security services on suspicion high treason after she raised just £41 for the Ukrainian army.
Enterprise
Karelina being taken away on suspicion of ‘high treason’ by members of FSB[/caption]
Karelina was put in handcuffs by an FSB member wearing a balaclavaThe ballerina moved to the US to learn danceAP
Putin’s top rival Alexie Navalny was killed inside a Russian Prison[/caption]
Reuters
Putin has been accused of killing all his political opponents[/caption]
Her worried family is now pleading for help to have her freed and brought home to the US.
Karelina’s former mother-in-law told the New York Post: “We are all in shock.
“She is just a wonderful soul. She would never do anything evil to anyone.”
Her family says they fear Karelina could be killed inside the prison for going against Putrin’s agenda, just like Navalny.
“We are so worried because we are reading stories about [Alexei] Navalny’s supporters arrested for mourning him,” she added.
“Knowing Ksenia, she would never do anything criminal.
“Her mom and dad had recently divorced and she wanted to see the family.”
Karelina, who holds a dual Russian-US citizenship, was travelling to Russia to spend New Year’s Eve with her parents.
However, the 33-year-old dancer was detained in January by local police in her hometown of Yekaterinburg and accused of “petty hooliganism”
She was later arrested by Putin’s FSB officers who claimed to have found her “involved in providing financial assistance to a foreign state”.
Karelina was suspected of collecting money for a New York-based Ukrainian organisation called Razom for the past two years since Putin invaded Ukraine and started his bloody war.
Reports suggested she only raised £41 for the cause.
She has also been accused of participating in public events in the US to help support Ukraine.
Dramatic footage shows the ballerina being taken away with her hat covering her eyes by Putin’s cronies.
She was then paraded blindfolded and in handcuffs by masked security agents in a Russian courtroom Tuesday.
Karelina’s ex-mother-in-law and her ex-husband are now fighting to get her back in the US.
“My son was calling her, and when we found out what had happened, we have all been in shock,” the lady added.
“He told me this morning ‘Let’s think what we can do to help her.’ We don’t want to cause her any trouble.”
Karelina reportedly arrived in the US in 2012 – and got married to her ex-husband the next year.
The couple, who were based in Maryland, divorced a few years ago before Karelina moved to California.
Political scientist Fyodor Krasheninnikov claimed: “She probably supported Ukraine a couple of times on social networks, maybe she collected something there.
“If you participated in any anti-war protests, wrote something on social networks, or, especially, donated to Ukrainians or encouraged them to do this, think a hundred times.
“Do you really need to go to Russia urgently? A second passport will not save you from anything.”
Navalny’s killing
Karelina’s detention casts more light on Putin’s crackdown on dissent days after Russian authorities announced Navalny’s death in prison.
The top Putin rival was found dead at the feared “Polar Wolf” jail, where he was serving a three-decade sentence, as he went on a walk, said prison authorities.
The 47-year-old widow has also called out the Kremlin for “lying and waiting” for the fatal toxins to vanish before they release his body.
Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the claims are “nothing but unsubstantiated accusations because they are not supported by anything, not confirmed”.
Yesterday, Navalny’s mother Lyudmila Navalnaya, 69, stood outside the intimidating Arctic jail in sub-zero temperatures and demanded Putin release her son’s body.
She said in a video: “Behind me is the penal colony IK-3 Polar Wolf, where my son Alexei Navalny died on February 16.
“For the fifth day, I cannot see him. They don’t give me his body and they don’t even tell me where he is.
“I appeal to you, Vladimir Putin, the solution to the issue depends only on you. Let me finally see my son.
“I demand that Alexei’s body be immediately handed over so that I can bury him humanely.”
Ksenia is being held accused of ‘high treason’She is a globetrotting dancer with joint US & Russian citizenshipShe beams as he poses by two American flags
Timeline around Navalny’s death
February 14: Several officers from the FSB, the Russian intelligence service, are said to have paid a visit to “Polar Wolf” prison — and proceeded to disconnect and dismantle some of the security cameras and listening devices there.
February 16, 2.17pm local time: Navalny, 47, was officially reported to have died.
February 16, 2.19pm: The prison service put out what appeared to be a prepared press release.
It read: “On February 16, 2024, in correctional colony No. 3, convict Navalny A.A. felt unwell after a walk, almost immediately losing consciousness.”
February 16, 2.23pm: A state-controlled channel on the Telegram messaging site claimed the cause of death was a blood clot, or thrombosis.
February 16, 2.30pm: Dmitry Peskov, the Kremlin’s spokesman, fronted the media about Navalny’s death.
February 16: US President Joe Biden blasted: “Make no mistake, Putin is responsible for Navalny’s death. Even in prison he was a powerful voice for the truth.”
February 16: Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy said: “Obviously, Putin killed him.”
Washington has repeatedly called the charges “ridiculous” and President Joe Biden branded Gershkovich’s detention as “totally illegal”.
The WSJ denies the charges and has called for his immediate release, as has his family.
He is the first Western reporter to be jailed on espionage charges in Russia since the Soviet era, and he faces a prison term of up to 20 years if convicted.