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Kremlin critic Navalny is flown to German hospital; in 'worrying' condition


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Kremlin critic Navalny is flown to German hospital; in 'worrying' condition

By Fabrizio Bensch and Martin Schlicht

 

2020-08-22T090904Z_1_LYNXMPEG7L07G_RTROPTP_4_RUSSIA-POLITICS-NAVALNY-GERMANY.JPG

Paramedics load a stretcher into an ambulance that allegedly transported Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny at Charite Mitte Hospital Complex where he will receive medical treatment in Berlin, Germany August 22, 2020. REUTERS/Christian Mang

 

BERLIN (Reuters) - Gravely ill Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny was evacuated to Germany for medical treatment on Saturday, flown out of the Siberian city of Omsk in an ambulance aircraft and taken to a hospital in Berlin.

 

There was no word yet from the Charite hospital on his condition but the founder of the activist group that arranged the flight called Navalny's health condition "very worrying".

 

A long-time opponent of President Vladimir Putin and campaigner against corruption, Navalny collapsed on a plane on Thursday after drinking tea that his allies believe was laced with poison.

 

Medical staff at the hospital in Omsk said on Friday evening after clearing Navalny to be flown out that he was in an induced coma and his life was not in immediate danger.

 

The air ambulance, arranged by the Cinema for Peace Foundation, flew to Berlin early on Saturday and Navalny, 44, was rushed to the Charite hospital complex.

 

The hospital said in a statement it would provide an update about his condition and further treatment once tests have been completed and after consulting with his family.

 

A spokeswoman for Charite said later that it was unlikely that the hospital would give a statement on Navalny over the weekend.

 

Cinema for Peace founder Jaka Bizilj, speaking to reporters outside the hospital, said "his health condition is very worrying".

 

"We got a very clear message from the doctors that if there had not been an emergency landing in Omsk, he would have died," said Bizilj, adding that it would be up to doctors and Navalny's family to provide further information on his condition.

 

Bizilj, a Slovenian-born activist and filmmaker, was earlier quoted by Bild tabloid as saying Navalny's condition was stable during the flight and after landing.

 

Kira Yarmysh, Navalny's spokeswoman, said on Twitter that "This is another proof that nothing was preventing Navalny from being transported, and it was necessary to do so as early as possible."

 

DELAYED EVACUATION

 

German doctors flew to Russia on Friday to evacuate Navalny at the request of his wife and allies who said that the hospital treating him was badly equipped.

 

But there was then a delay flying him out as the Omsk hospital initially said his condition meant he could not travel.

 

The Omsk doctors later said they had no objections after the German doctors deemed him fit for travel.

 

Navalny's wife, Yulia, sent a letter to the Kremlin directly appealing for it to intervene and grant permission for him to be flown out.

 

Navalny's allies have said they feared authorities in Russia might try to cover up clues as to how he fell ill.

 

The doctors in Omsk said on Saturday they were ready to share all information they have with the German clinic.

 

Two years ago, Pyotr Verzilov, another anti-Kremlin activist and a member of the Pussy Riot art collective, was treated at the Charite hospital after he was poisoned in Moscow.

 

Navalny has been a thorn in the Kremlin's side for more than a decade, exposing what he says is high-level graft and mobilising crowds of young protesters.

 

He has been repeatedly detained for organising public meetings and rallies and sued over his investigations into corruption. He was barred from running in a presidential election in 2018.

 

(Additional reporting by Reuters TV, Fanny Brodersen, Christoph Steitz, Maria Sheahan, Ekaterina Golubkova, Andrey Kuzmin, Susanne Neumayer-Remter; Editing by Frances Kerry)

 

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-- © Copyright Reuters 2020-08-23
 

 

 

  • Sad 1
Posted (edited)

They should check to see if he glows in the dark. 

 

What a bunch of dinosaurs the Russian Govt are... 

Edited by pedro01
  • Like 2
Posted
3 hours ago, pedro01 said:

They should check to see if he glows in the dark. 

 

What a bunch of dinosaurs the Russian Govt are... 

I wonder about the involvement of the Kremlin in this. Sure, he is a critic but one that is so contained that he never gets into the mainstream. Probably his poisoning is the most publicity he has got inside Russia.

 

Don't get me wrong, I firmly believe that the Novichok and the other poisoning in the UK were done by the Russian government and the orders came from the top. But this is overkill with too much blockback.

 

For what it is worth, my take is that Navalny has <deleted> off someone other than the central government. He went after so many people for corruption and malfeasance. He may have been working on something when he was attacked. I would be looking in that direction.

Posted
1 hour ago, Proboscis said:

He went after so many people for corruption and malfeasance. He may have been working on something when he was attacked. I would be looking in that direction.

      That direction always leads to Putin and the Kremlin.

  • Like 2
Posted
4 hours ago, Proboscis said:

I wonder about the involvement of the Kremlin in this. Sure, he is a critic but one that is so contained that he never gets into the mainstream. Probably his poisoning is the most publicity he has got inside Russia.

 

Don't get me wrong, I firmly believe that the Novichok and the other poisoning in the UK were done by the Russian government and the orders came from the top. But this is overkill with too much blockback.

 

For what it is worth, my take is that Navalny has <deleted> off someone other than the central government. He went after so many people for corruption and malfeasance. He may have been working on something when he was attacked. I would be looking in that direction.

Are you serious?  Political murder attempt on a Putin critic, and by use of poison?

 

And you're inclined to look elsewhere?

Posted
16 hours ago, Iron Tongue said:

Are you serious?  Political murder attempt on a Putin critic, and by use of poison?

 

And you're inclined to look elsewhere?

I don't think that Putin has the time or inclination to go after all and every critic and poison them. There are other ways of getting back at critics. And the way things are in that part of the world, a poisoning like this would not benefit Putin. Therefore I am much more inclined to look at what the victim was working on when he was poisoned. In that will be the clue.

 

As I mentioned in my original posting, I don't say that Putin is not capable of such a murder. But Russia is a more complex place and not all such murders are the work of Putin or the Kremlin.

Posted
21 hours ago, Proboscis said:

I wonder about the involvement of the Kremlin in this. Sure, he is a critic but one that is so contained that he never gets into the mainstream. Probably his poisoning is the most publicity he has got inside Russia.

 

Don't get me wrong, I firmly believe that the Novichok and the other poisoning in the UK were done by the Russian government and the orders came from the top. But this is overkill with too much blockback.

 

For what it is worth, my take is that Navalny has <deleted> off someone other than the central government. He went after so many people for corruption and malfeasance. He may have been working on something when he was attacked. I would be looking in that direction.

In Russia, nothing happens without Putin's permission.  All those corrupt powerful people owe their wealth and power to him.  They would not dare make a move affecting Russian politics without explicit approval and its unlikely Putin would give it for fear they would botch things.  It would be Russian state operatives and the world's most powerful and untraceable toxins, polonium, banned nerve agents. Here is an article from over a year ago.

Explainer: Why Russia Keeps Poisoning People, Foreign Policy Magazine

 

"Laboratory No. 12 on the outskirts of Moscow was established on the order of Vladimir Lenin in 1921 and went on to research and manufacture poisons, drugs, and psychotropic substances." It's still there today.

 

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