Speculation concerning the imminent release of multiple high-profile Russian political prisoners reached fever pitch on Wednesday when it was reported that a charter flight operated by Rossiya Airlines had departed the Siberian city of Omsk and was approaching Moscow, leading many to suggest that Russia’s highest-profile political prisoner Vladimir Kara-Murza could be on board.
Vadim Prokhorov, one of the jailed politician's lawyer’s, wrote on Facebook on Wednesday that a Tu-214 aircraft operated by Rossiya Airlines had landed in Omsk at 10am local time today and had taken off for Moscow at 4pm local time.
Later, Tikhon Dzyadko, the editor-in-chief of independent Russian-language TV channel Dozhd, posted a screenshot of flight RA-64533, which according to real time flight tracker FlightRadar, actually arrived in Omsk today at 10:24am local time and departed at 4:40pm.
Kara-Murza was earlier on Wednesday revealed by Reuters to have been transferred from the Omsk penal colony where he had been serving his sentence for treason to another facility, without specifying where he was being taken.
Kara-Murza’s lawyer had earlier described being denied access to his client twice in the past 48 hours to independent Russian TV channel Dozhd.
Sergey Safronov said that he had been denied access to Kara-Murza both on Tuesday or Wednesday by the administration of Penal Colony № 6 in Omsk, where the outspoken opposition politician is serving a 25-year sentence for spreading “false information” about the Russian military, participating in the activities of an “undesirable organisation” and treason.
Safronov told independent media outlet Agentstvo that despite receiving assurances from the court that Kara-Murza was still in the facility, he had found it “hard to believe”, adding that: “The story is indeed strange and does not look like the truth.”
In early July, amid severely failing health, Kara-Murza was transferred from his penal colony to a prison hospital, where he was also initially denied access to his lawyer.
While his destination is unclear, Kara-Murza may be the ninth high-profile political prisoner to have suddenly been transferred in the past few days, further fuelling rumours of a significant prison exchange being prepared.
Formerly the co-chair of murdered opposition politician Boris Nemtsov’s Foundation for Freedom and a former vice president of the Free Russia Foundation, Kara-Murza is one of Russia’s highest profile opposition politicians and received a Pulitzer prize in 2024 for his columns for The Washington Post “insisting on a democratic future for his country”.