- Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny has complained about conditions at the prison where he is being held, in his latest court appearance via video link.
- Navalny said that prison authorities are censoring newspapers and refusing to give him books sent by relatives.
- Navalny, 44, was jailed in February and is serving two-and-a-half years on old fraud charges he says are politically motivated.
Petushki – Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny appeared in court via video link on Wednesday for the start of hearings into complaints against conditions at his penal colony.
Navalny, 44, was jailed in February and is serving two-and-a-half years at a facility outside Moscow on old fraud charges he says are politically motivated.
His detention, which came months after he survived a near-fatal poisoning attack, was met with sharp condemnation from Western countries which slapped fresh sanctions on the Kremlin in response.
The complaints heard on Wednesday centre around Navalny's claims that prison authorities are refusing to provide him with books sent to him by relatives, including the Quran, and that they are censoring newspapers he receives.
"It's a bizarre situation," Navalny said, according to an AFP journalist in the court in Petushki, 125km east of Moscow.
"I would like to be given the books that were sent to me," he added.
Articles removed with scissors
Navalny was shown in the Petushki courtroom wearing dark prison attire, with hunched shoulders, and was less combative on Wednesday than in previous hearings in the lead up to his jailing in February.
Last month he ended a 24-day hunger strike initiated to protest a lack of medical attention at what is considered to be one of Russia's most harsh prison facilities.
Navalny said he had only been able to obtain a copy of the Quran after he was transferred in April to a prison hospital, where he had received medical attention after announcing the hunger strike.
He also complained in court on Wednesday that newspapers he had received in prison appeared to have had articles removed from them with scissors.
Since Navalny's arrest in February, authorities have moved to dismantle his nationwide political offices and anti-corruption organisation by branding them extremist or terror groups.
The move has been seen as part of efforts to shield the increasingly unpopular ruling United Russia party from real competition ahead of parliamentary elections in September.