Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny today said attackers threw two cakes in his face in Moscow, adding that the patisserie assault was linked to the Kremlin.
Navalny, a tireless critic of President Vladimir Putin, said the attack outside his office was carried out by "some jokers" who "chucked two cakes at me and legged it," posting a picture of his cream-smeared face on Instagram.
The lawyer and anti-corruption whistleblower who has exposed vast wealth of Russian officials and is spearheading the opposition challenge for parliamentary polls later this year, linked the attack to the Kremlin.
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Navalny earlier this month attempted to sue Putin for corruption, accusing him of ordering the release of huge loans to a firm owned by his son-in-law. A court threw out the lawsuit a day later, citing Putin's immunity as president.
On Tuesday, the European Court of Human Rights ruled Russia wrongfully convicted Navalny and his co-defendant in a 2013 embezzlement trial and ordered it to pay each of them compensation of 8,000 euros. Russia vowed to appeal the ruling.
Opposition supporters are preparing to mark Saturday's one-year anniversary of the shooting of politician Boris Nemtsov close to the Kremlin with a march through central Moscow.
Navalny's opposition colleague and former prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov came under a similar pie-in-the-face attack two weeks ago when two men came up to him in a Moscow restaurant and threw a cake at him, shouting "Disgrace to Russia!" and "American agent!"
Kasyanov asked for a formal investigation but Russia's interior ministry ruled the incident did not count as a crime.
The cake attack on Kasyanov by men apparently from Russia's North Caucasus came after Chechen strongman Ramzan Kadyrov posted a threatening Instagram image of Kasyanov in the crosshairs of a sniper's rifle.