Novichok poisoning: Alexei Navalny comes OUT of induced coma
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Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny has been taken out of an induced coma and is responsive.
Navalny, a fierce, high-profile critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, was flown to Germany on August 22, two days after falling ill on a domestic flight in Russia.
German chemical weapons experts say tests show that the 44-year-old Navalny was poisoned with a Soviet-era nerve agent, prompting the German government last week to demand that Russia investigate the case.
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny has been taken out of an induced coma and is responsive
Berlin’s Charite hospital said Monday that Navalny’s condition has improved, allowing doctors to end the medically induced coma and gradually ease him off mechanical ventilation.
‘He is responding to verbal stimuli,’ Charite hospital said in a statement, reporting that the 44-year-old’s condition ‘has improved’.
It noted that he was responding to speech but ‘long-term consequences of the serious poisoning can still not be ruled out.’
The politician, an opponent of Vladimir Putin, is in a Berlin hospital after falling ill on a flight in Siberia
Germany has warned Russia that it could halt a gas pipeline project over the poisoning of the Kremlin critic (pictured at a rally in Moscow last year)
He has been in an induced coma in the Berlin hospital since he was flown to Germany for treatment.
German authorities said last week that tests showed ‘proof without doubt’ that he had been poisoned with a chemical nerve agent from the Novichok group.
British authorities identified the Soviet-era Novichok as the poison used on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in England in 2018.
Tests showed he was poisoned with Novichok – the nerve agent used in the Salisbury attack on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal in 2018.
British authorities identified the Soviet-era Novichok as the poison used on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in England in 2018
German chancellor Angela Merkel said Mr Navalny’s poisoning was an attempt to silence one of President Putin’s fiercest critics.
She at first rejected linking the case to the giant Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which will deliver Russian gas directly to Germany under the Baltic Sea.
But yesterday her foreign minister Heiko Maas called for Moscow to co-operate with the investigation into the incident, saying: ‘I hope the Russians won’t force us to change our position regarding the Nord Stream 2 pipeline.
‘If there won’t be any contributions from the Russian side… we will have to consult with our partners.’
He did not rule out sanctions against the Putin regime, which has denied involvement in the attack on Mr Navalny, 44.
German chancellor Angela Merkel (left) said Mr Navalny’s poisoning was an attempt to silence one of President Putin’s (right) fiercest critics
He told the paper that ‘if we think about sanctions, they should be pinpointed effectively’.
However, Mr Maas also admitted that halting the building of the nearly completed gas pipeline would harm German and European companies.
He said: ‘Whoever demands this has to be aware of the consequences.
‘More than 100 companies from 12 European countries are involved (in the construction), about half of them from Germany.’
The German government has come under growing pressure to use the joint German-Russian pipeline project as leverage in getting Russia to provide answers on Mr Navalny.
The Nord Stream 2 project would deliver Russian gas directly to Germany under the Baltic Sea when completed, bypassing Ukraine.
Mr Navalny, a Kremlin critic and corruption investigator, fell ill on a flight to Moscow last month and was taken to a hospital in the Siberian city of Omsk. He has been in an induced coma in a Berlin hospital since he was flown to Germany for treatment on August 22.
German authorities have said that tests showed he had been poisoned with a chemical nerve agent from the Novichok group.
British authorities previously identified the nerve agent, developed during the Soviet era, as the poison used on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, Wiltshire, in 2018.
Mr Maas said: ‘We have high expectations from the Russians to bring light into this severe crime. If they have nothing to do with this attack then it’s in their own interest to put the facts on the table.’
Mr Navalny is regarded as the most popular and prominent opponent of President Vladimir Putin (pictured in Moscow on Saturday)
President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman has brushed off allegations that the Kremlin was involved in poisoning Mr Navalny and said last week that Germany had not provided Moscow with any evidence about the politician’s condition.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said Mr Navalny’s poisoning was an attempted murder that aimed to silence one of Mr Putin’s fiercest critics, and called for a full investigation.
Mrs Merkel personally offered the country’s assistance in treating Mr Navalny.
He is now in a stable condition at Berlin’s Charite hospital, but doctors expect a long recovery and have not ruled out that the 44-year-old could face long-term effects to his health.
Mrs Merkel has previously rejected the idea that the Navalny case should be linked to the Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline.
Navalny is the most popular and prominent opponent of President Vladimir Putin, and the German announcement this week that he was poisoned by a nerve agent has raised the possibility of further Western sanctions against Moscow. Alexei Navalny, pictured with his wife Yulia, has been a thorn in the Kremlin’s side for years
The US has long opposed the project, which has been increasingly a source of friction between Berlin and Washington.
In early August, three Republican senators threatened sanctions against an operator of a Baltic Sea port located in Mrs Merkel’s parliamentary constituency over its part in Nord Stream 2. The Mukran port is a key staging post for ships involved in its construction.
The US argues that the project will endanger European security by making Germany overly dependent on Russian gas. It is also opposed by the Ukraine and Poland, which will be bypassed by the pipeline under the Baltic, as well as some other European nations.In addition to the security concerns, the US also wants to sell more of its own liquefied natural gas, or LNG, to Europe.
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