TALLINN, Estonia — Imprisoned Russian opposition politician Vladimir Kara-Murza has been transferred to a prison hospital, and his attorneys have been unable to visit him there since Thursday, his wife and one of his lawyers said Friday.
The development comes as the Kremlin continues its unrelenting crackdown on dissent that has ensnared thousands of people — prominent opposition activists and ordinary Russians alike — since the start of the war in Ukraine in February 2022.
Kara-Murza, 42, was convicted of treason last year over public remarks harshly critical of the Kremlin. He has rejected the charges against him as punishment for standing up to Russian President Vladimir Putin and likened the proceedings to the show trials under Soviet dictator Josef Stalin. He is serving 25 years, the stiffest sentence for a Kremlin critic in modern Russia, in a penal colony in the Siberian city of Omsk.
Kara-Murza's lawyers went to Penal Colony No. 6 on Thursday to visit him, but after hours of waiting were turned away by prison officials who said he had been transferred to a prison hospital, Yevgenia Kara-Murza and lawyer Vadim Prokhorov said in an online statement Friday. They said the lawyers were also not able to see him in the hospital on Thursday or Friday — hospital staff kept turning them away citing various administrative reasons.
Yevgenia Kara-Murza told The Associated Press in an interview Friday that prison officials said her husband was transferred to the hospital for an unspecified ''examination.''
''We don't have any information about what state Volodya is in, why he was really transferred to the hospital and what is really happening,'' Yevgenia Kara-Murza said. ''And, unfortunately, we won't have (any information) until next week, because during the weekend Russia's entire penitentiary system is closed."
Kara-Murza's wife and lawyers have regularly sounded the alarm about his deteriorating health. In 2015 and 2017, Kara-Murza suffered two near-fatal poisonings and developed polyneuropathy, a condition that deadens the feeling in his limbs.
It has been slowly worsening behind bars, especially as Kara-Murza has spent months in solitary confinement — a practice that has become common for Kremlin critics and is widely viewed as designed to put additional pressure on them.