Anti-Putin activist has antiseptic thrown in his face while campaigning

Aleksei Navalny was stained green by the liquid as he campaigned in Siberia.

— -- Russia’s most prominent opposition activist, Aleksei Navalny, was doused in green antiseptic cleaner while campaigning for an intended presidential run next year.

Navalny, who made his name uncovering the alleged ill-gotten gains of top Kremlin officials, was opening a local campaign headquarters in the far-flung Siberian town of Barnaul when a man threw the disinfectant in his face, staining it vivid green, witnesses told news agency Tass.

Immediately after the incident, Navalny posted a photo of himself coated in green on Twitter with the caption “To open the headquarters in Barnaul, I will do so as the character from the movie ‘The Mask,’” referring to the green-faced character played by Jim Carrey in the 1994 movie. “Awesome. Even my teeth are green!”

He was apparently unharmed by the liquid.

It is the latest in a procession of dirty tricks that the campaign has run into since Navalny took it to Siberia. He has been pelted with eggs, his fellow activists have found the doors of their apartments sealed up with filler foam, and police have disrupted a campaign event by forcing people to evacuate over a supposed bomb threat.

Navalny, known for a sarcastic, irreverent style, has pointedly tried to take the disruptions in stride. After police forced people to leave the campaign event over the bomb threat, he took it outside, speaking to supporters from a snowdrift, with the temperature at 21 degrees Fahrenheit, according to a Times of London correspondent who was there.

A former lawyer who turned his anti-corruption work into a political movement, Navalny has faced a series of criminal cases, which he says are meant to block his political activity. This month a court handed him a five-year suspended sentence on fraud charges, after the original verdict was ruled flawed by the European Court of Human Rights.

Russian law forbids those convicted of a criminal offense from running for public office, but Navalny has said he will run regardless. He has said that he has no expectation of beating Putin but that his campaign is intended to show how rigged politics are under Putin’s rule and remind Russians that opposition forces still exist in the country.

He faces a dizzyingly uphill battle, however. Hundreds of people attended a rally supporting him in the Siberian city of Tomsk, but a recent poll by the independent Levada Center found only 3 percent of Russians “respected” Navalny and only 1 percent said they would vote for him.

“Maybe in the Kremlin they think with a green a face I won’t make any more videos,” Navalny said in a video published on his site shortly after being hit with the antiseptic. “But I definitely will, because even more people will watch me and it in absolutely no way will stop me.”