Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dissident to be treated in Berlin

Russia bows to pressure, says Putin critic can be transporte­d.

- DARIA LITVINOVA Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Kirsten Grieshaber, David Rising, Pan Pylas, Danica Kirka and Daniel Kozin of The Associated Press.

MOSCOW — Russian doctors gave a dissident who is in a coma after a suspected poisoning permission to be transferre­d abroad for medical treatment, in a reversal Friday that came after more than 24 hours of wrangling over Alexei Navalny’s condition and treatment.

Navalny, a 44-year-old politician and corruption investigat­or who is one of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s fiercest critics, was admitted to an intensive care unit in the Siberian city of Omsk on Thursday. His supporters believe that tea he drank was laced with poison — and that the Kremlin is behind both his illness and the delay in transferri­ng him to a top German hospital. It would not be the first time a prominent, outspoken Russian was targeted in such a way — or the first time the Kremlin was accused of being behind it.

Russian doctors say there is no evidence of poisoning, and the Kremlin denied the authoritie­s tried to prevent the transfer from happening.

Even after German specialist­s arrived on a plane equipped with advanced medical equipment Friday morning at his family’s behest, Navalny’s physicians in Omsk said he was too unstable to move.

Navalny’s supporters denounced that as a ploy by authoritie­s to stall until any poison in his system would no longer be traceable. The Omsk medical team relented only after a charity that had organized the medevac plane revealed that the German doctors examined the politician and said he was fit to be transporte­d.

Deputy chief doctor of the Omsk hospital Anatoly Kalinichen­ko then told reporters that Navalny’s condition had stabilized and that physicians “didn’t mind” transferri­ng the politician, given that his relatives were willing “to take on the risks.”

According to Russia’s RIA Novosti news agency, the flight to Berlin is scheduled for this morning.

The Kremlin denied resistance to the transfer was political, with spokesman Dmitry Peskov saying that it was purely a medical decision. However, the reversal came as internatio­nal pressure on Russia’s leadership mounted.

On Thursday, leaders of France and Germany said the two countries were ready to offer Navalny and his family any and all assistance and insisted on an investigat­ion into what happened. On Friday, European Union spokeswoma­n Nabila Massrali added that the bloc was urging Russian authoritie­s to allow him to be taken abroad.

Also on Friday, the European Court of Human Rights said it was considerin­g a request from Navalny’s supporters that it urge the Russian government to let the politician be moved.

The most prominent member of Russia’s opposition, Navalny campaigned to challenge Putin in the 2018 presidenti­al election but was barred from running. Since then, he has been promoting opposition candidates in regional elections, challengin­g members of the ruling party, United Russia.

His Foundation for Fighting Corruption has been exposing graft among government officials, including some at the highest level. But he had to shut the foundation last month after a financiall­y devastatin­g lawsuit from a businessma­n with close ties to the Kremlin.

Navalny fell ill on a flight back to Moscow from Siberia on Thursday and was taken to the hospital after the plane made an emergency landing. His team made arrangemen­ts to transfer him to Charite, a clinic in Berlin that has a history of treating famous foreign leaders and dissidents.

Dr. Yaroslav Ashikhmin, Navalny’s physician in Moscow, told The Associated Press that being on a plane with specialize­d equipment, including a ventilator and a machine that can do the work of the heart and lungs, “can be even safer than staying in a hospital in Omsk.”

Navalny’s spokespers­on, Kira Yarmysh, posted pictures of what she said was a bathroom inside the hospital that showed squalid conditions, including walls with paint peeling off, rusting pipes, and a dirty floor and walls.

While his supporters and family members continue to insist that Navalny was poisoned, doctors in Omsk denied that and put forth another theory.

The hospital’s chief doctor, Alexander Murakhovsk­y, said in a video published by Omsk news outlet NGS55 that a metabolic disorder was the most likely diagnosis and that a drop in blood sugar may have caused Navalny to lose consciousn­ess.

Another doctor with ties to the politician, Dr. Anastasia Vasilyeva, said that diagnosing Navalny with a “metabolic disorder” says nothing about what may have caused it — and it could have been the result of a poisoning.

Ashikhmin, who’s been Navalny’s doctor since 2013, said the politician has always been in good health, regularly went for medical checkups and didn’t have any underlying illnesses that could have triggered his condition.

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 ?? (AP/Evgeniy Sofiychuk) ?? Police patrol as journalist­s gather Friday at the hospital in Omsk, Russia, where opposition activist Alexei Navalny was being treated.
(AP/Evgeniy Sofiychuk) Police patrol as journalist­s gather Friday at the hospital in Omsk, Russia, where opposition activist Alexei Navalny was being treated.

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