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Russian blogger Aleksandr Valov (file photo)
Russian blogger Aleksandr Valov (file photo)

A court in Russia has sentenced blog editor Aleksandr Valov to six years in prison after finding him guilty of extortion, a charge the journalist denies.

Valov, the founder and editor in chief of the now-defunct site BlogSochi, was sentenced by the Lazarev district court in the southern city of Sochi on December 26.

The court also ordered him to pay 700,000 rubles ($10,000) in fines.

Valov was arrested in January and charged with trying to extort 300,000 rubles (US$4,300) from Yury Napso, a member of Russia's lower house of parliament.

In June, Valov's lawyer Aleksandr Popkov said that Valov had been hospitalized and had undergone an operation for a "penetrating wound in the abdomen."

Popkov said the case's lead investigator had told him that Valov stabbed himself with a pen.

Popkov called for an investigation, saying Valov was involved in preparing his defense and "was not depressed."

Valov filed several complaints about the harsh conditions of his confinement while awaiting trial.

Popkov was quoted by Russian media on December 26 as saying that the ruling was extremely cruel and that it "once again demonstrated the court’s bias."

Aleksey Navalny, a prominent Russian opposition politician, condemned the court verdict, saying in a tweet that it was politically motivated and demonstrated the "lawlessness" in the country.

"Six years, what a term. This is what murderers get," Navalny tweeted.

Navalny praised Valov's blogs as "excellent" work that exposed corrupt officials in the region.

Valov has denied the charges and called them politically motivated retribution for his publishing a photo report of a beach property belonging to Napso’s brother.

Valov has also said the allegation against him was "an attempt to shut down the major and only independent [media] project of Sochi” ahead of the March presidential election and the World Cup soccer tournament in Russia.

BlogSochi also reported extensively on local corruption in the run-up to the 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics, which ended up being the most expensive Winter Olympics in history.

With reporting by zona.media and Ekho Moskvy

Unidentified gunmen opened fire on a Pakistani politician outside his home in the southern port city of Karachi on the evening of December 25, before fleeing the scene, police said.

Former lawmaker Ali Raza Abidi, 46, was critically wounded in the attack and he later died at a hospital, senior police officer Javed Alam Odho told reporters.

Abidi was alone in his car when the attack took place, authorities say, adding that a postmortem examination showed that he sustained four bullet wounds.

No one claimed responsibility for the killing. Police cordoned off the scene of the attack, local media reported.

Abidi, the former leader of the Muttahida Qaumi Movement party, was elected to the National Assembly in 2013.

The party urged the authorities to immediately find and arrest Abidi’s killers.

Prime Minister Imran Khan and several other opposition politicians condemned the attack.

The Muttahida Qaumi Movement party represents the Urdu speaking population and its two factions have an uneasy relationship with each other.

Based on reporting by AP and dawn.com

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"Watchdog" is a blog with a singular mission -- to monitor the latest developments concerning human rights, civil society, and press freedom. We'll pay particular attention to reports concerning countries in RFE/RL's broadcast region.

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