Navalny, who has declared his intention to stand for president in 2018, was released in a secret location in Moscow early today to evade media attention.
"Hi. I'm out," Navalny wrote on Instagram, posting a picture of himself on a street. A photographer working for his team later posted photographs of him meeting colleagues at the office of his anti-corruption foundation.
During Navalny's time behind bars, the Kremlin race he hopes to contest has heated up with television star Ksenia Sobchak throwing in her hat.
He told the 300 who gathered in the rain: "Do we need this kind of power that makes fun of us? No, and that's why I'm a candidate, the right candidate for Astrakhan."
Navalny wrote jokingly that while in jail he had read 20 books, learnt a few words of the Kyrgyz language and drunk 80 litres (20 gallons) of tea.
Earlier today, supporters of Navalny hung a banner from a bridge close to the Kremlin reading: "It's time to get rid of Putin and time to elect Navalny."
Earlier this year he served sentences of 15 days and 25 days for organising unauthorised anti-Putin protests.
During his latest jail term, his supporters held rallies on Putin's birthday on October 7, with more than 270 detained nationwide.
He has faced a constant stream of official bans on public meetings, as well violent attacks on him and his supporters and vandalism of his offices.
During Navalny's latest period in isolation in a Moscow detention centre, another high-profile figure has joined the presidential race.
The presidential race has yet to officially begin and Putin has not yet declared his participation in the March 2018 election. However he is widely expected to seek and win a six-year term that would extend his rule till 2024.
Sobchak has vowed to back Navalny's bid to be included in the race -- as electoral authorities say his suspended sentence for fraud makes him ineligible to stand until 2028.
However, many liberals see her as a Kremlin-backed spoiler candidate brought in to give the race a veneer of opposition.
Navalny has yet to comment on Sobchak's bid, but earlier condemned rumours of her possible candidacy, saying this was a "rather disgusting Kremlin game" and calling her a "liberal laughing stock."
Sobchak, 35, calls herself "the candidate against all".
Russian media focused on her past as host of a reality show called Dom-2, or House-2, where contestants have to form couples, as well as of modelling show "Russia's Next Top Model."
"She's going to work according to her profession at the elections: in order to turn non-contested presidential pseudo-polls into the biggest show of 2018," wrote Vedomosti business daily in a Friday editorial.
She paid a price for her opposition campaigning, however, losing lucrative television work, and now hosts a show on independent TV Dozhd, or Rain.
Forbes' Russian edition estimates her net worth at USD 2.1 million.
Sobchak is set to present her campaign to journalists in Moscow on Tuesday.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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