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- Main points of the $300 billion climate deal
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- Israel retreat helps rescuers heal from October 7 attack
- Afghan women turn to entrepreneurship under Taliban
- Mounting economic costs of India's killer smog
- At climate talks, painstaking diplomacy and then anger
- Uruguayans head to polls with left hoping for comeback
- Trump's mass deportation plan could end up hurting economic growth
- Iran director in exile says 'bittersweet' to rep Germany at Oscars
- US consumers to bargain hunt in annual 'Black Friday' spree
- Cheers, angst as US nuclear plant Three Mile Island to reopen
- Scientists seek miracle pill to stop methane cow burps
- Australia ditches plans to fine tech giants for misinformation
- Developing nations slam 'paltry' $300 bn climate deal
- Red Bulls win 'Hudson River derby' to reach conference final
- Neuville wins world title after Tanak crashes at Rally Japan
- Neuville wins world rally title after Tanak crashes in Japan
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- New Zealand beat 'proud' Italy in Cane's Test farewell
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- New Zealand beat Italy in Cane's Test farewell
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- Defeated Leipzig lose more ground on Bayern
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- Marseille down Lens to stay in touch with Ligue 1 leaders
Navalny's tomb 'covered with fresh flowers every day': widow
Well-wishers cover the grave of Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny with flowers every day, showing he still has "huge numbers of supporters", his widow Yulia Navalnaya said on Tuesday.
"It was vital for the (Moscow) regime that he should feel rejected by everyone. And that's clearly not the case," Navalnaya, 48, told French broadcaster France Inter in an interview the day her late husband's autobiography, "Patriot", was published.
She highlighted the many letters Navalny received before he died in February 2024 in an Arctic penal colony, where he had been held in widely condemned harsh conditions.
"Even after his death, it's still all going on. There are huge numbers of supporters of Alexei Navalny. And in Russia too, people visit his grave every day. His grave is covered with fresh flowers daily," Navalnaya said.
For Navalnaya, her husband was "the only real competitor to (Russian President) Vladimir Putin".
She herself vowed in a BBC interview on Monday to return to Russia and stand for election should Putin ever be toppled.
Navalnaya told France Inter she was "not afraid" even though she does not believe herself "100-percent safe".
"This regime has no real plan and no real strategy... There's no way to predict who will be attacked next," she said.
"We have to be aware that Vladimir Putin's regime, having begun persecuting its political opponents, having launched the war, having killed its main competitor, will stop at nothing. Nothing will stop it," Navalnaya added.
After Navalny's death, his wife was added to Russia's "terrorists and extremists" blacklist in July.
She was already subject to an arrest warrant for "membership of an extremist group".
Navalnaya lives outside Russia and has sworn to keep her husband's opposition cause alive.
A.Gasser--BTB