From the MT:
“Doctors Bar Navalny’s
Evacuation to Germany as Confusion Surrounds Presence of Poison in System”
A day after Alexei Navalny was
hospitalized in an apparent poisoning attempt, doctors are barring his
evacuation to Germany citing his unstable condition, while confusion surrounds
the presence of poison in the prominent Russian opposition leader’s system. Navalny,
44, lost consciousness an hour into a flight from the Siberian city of Tomsk to
Moscow on Thursday. After his plane made an emergency landing in the Siberian
city of Omsk, he was transported to a hospital, where the deputy doctor told
journalists the hospital was “working on saving his life.” He said that the
opposition leader was connected to a ventilator and in critical condition. Navalny’s team has pushed for the Kremlin
critic to be transferred to a leading European toxicology center, citing a lack
of necessary equipment at the regional hospital and a worry that Russian
doctors will be pressured by the authorities to withhold details of the cause
of his illness.
An air ambulance departed from
Germany early Friday morning to collect Navalny, but the regional hospital’s
head doctor said his condition was unstable and he could not be transferred,
according to the Kremlin critic’s spokeswoman Kira Yarmysh. The head of Navalny’s Anti-Corruption
Foundation Ivan Zhdanov, who was also at the scene, told journalists that
police reported that a “poison” was found in Navalny’s system that is
“dangerous to those around him,” but that law enforcement wouldn't name the
substance. Later on Friday morning, the
hospital's deputy chief doctor contradicted this statement, saying that
"no trace" of poison had been found in Navalny's system during tests
so far. “Until now doctors had said that they are ready to authorize
transportation. That is why we organized it in the shortest possible time,”
Yarmysh wrote on Twitter. “Now, at the last moment, doctors are not giving
permission. This decision, of course, was not made by them but by the Kremlin.”
In a separate tweet Yarmysh called the move to bar Navalny from being
transported an “attempt on his life.”
The plane that departed from
Nuremberg to pick up Navalny was organized by the Cinema for Peace foundation.
The German NGO had previously airlifted Pussy Riot activist Pyotr Verzilov to
Germany after he suffered a suspected poisoning in 2018. “I hope that he can recover and... he can
receive from us all the help and medical support needed,” Chancellor Angela
Merkel said in a joint news conference with French President Emmanuel Macron. On
Thursday, the Kremlin had wished Navalny a speedy recovery and said that if he
needed to leave the country for treatment, the necessary travel requests would
be considered. Vladimir Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov also urged people not
to speculate about the cause of Navalny’s illness and to wait for test results.
Navalny was returning to the Russian
capital on Thursday after touring Siberia in support of independent candidates
running in local elections next month. On Wednesday, he posted a photo on Instagram
from the city of Tomsk with the caption: “Crooks wont kick themselves out of
the city parliament!” A longtime critic of the Kremlin and Russia’s de facto
opposition leader, Navalny has faced pressure for his activism before. While serving a 30-day prison sentence last
summer for calling on people to attend an anti-government protest, Navalny
suffered an acute allergic reaction. At least one doctor said he may have been
poisoned. In 2017, a pro-Kremlin
activist threw a chemical dye at him that left him partially blind in one eye. That year Navalny had triggered some of the
largest anti-government protests in years after his Anti-Corruption Foundation
published an investigation into corruption by then Prime Minister Dmitry
Medvedev. On Thursday, the local Taiga.info news website reported that Navalny
may have been in Tomsk to work on an investigation into local deputies
representing the ruling United Russia party.
There is a history of Kremlin
critics having been poisoned. In 2006,
former Russian spy turned critic of President Vladimir Putin Alexander
Litvinenko was poisoned by tea laced with a radioactive isotope while in exile
in the U.K. In 2018, the U.K. accused Russian military intelligence of
poisoning former Russian spy Sergei Skripal with Novichok, a military grade
nerve agent. That same year, Verzilov
was rushed to a Moscow hospital after suddenly losing his sight, hearing and
mobility. After he was airlifted to Germany, doctors at a hospital in Berlin
said his symptoms were strongly indicative of poisoning.
^ Clearly the Kremlin is behind
both the poisoning and refusing to let Navalny go to Germany for medical
care - since he’s in a coma. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.