Alexei Navalny: 'Poisoned' Russian opposition
leader in a coma
20 August
2020
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-53844958
Mr Navalny was flying to Moscow from Tomsk and was
diverted to Omsk after he fell ill
Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny is
unconscious in hospital suffering from suspected poisoning, his spokeswoman has
said.
The
anti-corruption campaigner fell ill during a flight and the plane made an
emergency landing in Omsk, where doctors said he was in a coma and they were trying
to save his life.
His team
suspects something was put in his tea at an airport cafe.
The Kremlin
said that it wished Mr Navalny a "speedy recovery".
Mr Navalny,
44, has for years been among President Vladimir Putin's staunchest critics.
In June he
described a vote on constitutional reforms as a "coup" and a
"violation of the constitution". The reforms allow Mr Putin to serve
another two terms in office, after the four terms he has already had.
Russia's
vociferous Putin critic
British
Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said he was "deeply concerned" by the
reports Mr Navalny had been poisoned, and sent his thoughts to him and his
family.
What has
the spokeswoman said?
Kira
Yarmysh, the press secretary for the Anti-Corruption Foundation, which Mr Navalny
founded in 2011, tweeted: "This morning Navalny was returning to Moscow
from Tomsk.
"During
the flight, he felt ill. The plane made an urgent landing in Omsk. Alexei has
toxic poisoning."
She added:
"We suspect that Alexei was poisoned by something mixed into [his] tea. It
was the only thing he drank since morning.
"Doctors
are saying that the toxic agent absorbed faster through the hot liquid. Right
now Alexei is unconscious."
She also
said that doctors were initially ready to share any information but then they
later claimed the toxicology tests had been delayed and were "clearly
playing for time, and not saying what they know".
Diagnosis
would be "towards evening", she was told.
Both Mr
Navalny's wife, Yulia Navalnaya, and doctor, Anastasia Vasilyeva, have arrived
at the hospital.
Mrs
Navalnaya was initially denied access to her husband because authorities said
the patient had not agreed to the visit, Ms Yarmysh said, although she was
later allowed on to the ward.
Dr
Vasilyeva said they were seeking to transfer the opposition leader to a
specialist poison control centre in Europe, but hospital doctors were refusing
to provide records of his condition.
What are
the other reports from the scene?
The Tass
news agency quoted one source at the Omsk Emergency Hospital as saying:
"Alexei Anatolyevich Navalny, born in 1976. Poisoning intensive
care."
However,
the deputy head physician of the hospital later told media that it was not
certain Mr Navalny had been poisoned, although poisoning was
"naturally" one of the diagnoses being considered.
Anatoly
Kalinichenko said that doctors were "genuinely trying to save [Mr
Navalny's] life".
Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov later said it wished the critic a speedy recovery - as
it would all citizens in such circumstances - and that the authorities would
consider approving treatment abroad if it were requested.
Other
disturbing video appears to show a stricken Mr Navalny in pain on the flight.
Passenger
Pavel Lebedev said: "At the start of the flight he went to the toilet and
didn't come back. He started feeling really sick. They struggled to bring him
round and he was screaming in pain."
Another
photograph on social media purports to show Mr Navalny drinking from a cup at a
Tomsk airport cafe.
The
Interfax agency said the cafe owners were checking CCTV to see if it could
provide any evidence.
Who is
Alexei Navalny?
He made a
name for himself by exposing official corruption, labelling Mr Putin's United
Russia as "the party of crooks and thieves", and has served several
jail terms.
In 2011 he
was arrested and imprisoned for 15 days following protests over vote-rigging by
Mr Putin's United Russia party in parliamentary elections.
Mr Navalny
was briefly jailed in July 2013 on embezzlement charges but denounced the
sentence as political.
He
attempted to stand in the 2018 presidential race but was barred because of
previous fraud convictions in a case he again said was politically motivated.
Mr Navalny
was also given a 30-day jail term in July 2019 after calling for unauthorised
protests.
He was
taken ill during that jail sentence. Doctors diagnosed him with "contact
dermatitis" but he said he had never had any acute allergic reactions and
his own doctor suggested he might have been exposed to "some toxic
agent". Mr Navalny also said he thought he may have been poisoned.
Mr Navalny
also suffered a serious chemical burn to his right eye in 2017 when he was
assaulted with green, antiseptic dye.
Last year
his Anti-Corruption Foundation was officially declared a "foreign
agent", enabling the authorities to subject it to more checks.
Other
attacks on Kremlin critics
If this is
confirmed as a poisoning, previous attacks on high-profile critics of President
Putin would again be thrown into the spotlight.
They
include politician Boris Nemtsov and journalist Anna Politkovskaya, who were
shot dead, and intelligence officer Alexander Litvinenko, who died of poisoning
in the UK.
Journalist
and opposition activist Vladimir Kara-Murza is still alive, but has alleged he
was poisoned twice by Russian security services. He nearly died after suffering
kidney failure in 2015 and went into a coma two years later.
Another
Kremlin critic, Pyotr Verzilov, accused Russia's intelligence services of
poisoning him in 2018, when he fell ill after a court hearing, losing his sight
and ability to speak.
The same
year, former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter were poisoned
with the Novichok nerve agent in the British city of Salisbury. The UK believes
agents from Russia's GRU military intelligence service were behind the attack,
but the Kremlin has always denied involvement.




Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário