Houston Chronicle

Russian activist now conscious after suspected poisoning

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MOSCOW — A member of the Russian protest group Pussy Riot said Tuesday he’s recovering after two weeks in intensive care for a suspected poisoning while a fellow activist suggested he could have been targeted for looking into the killings of Russian journalist­s in Africa.

Pyotr Verzilov has been at Berlin’s Charite hospital since arriving from Moscow, where he had been previously treated. Verzilov tweeted that he only fully regained consciousn­ess three days ago after being in a “black hole” for the previous 12 days.

German doctors treating Verzilov say reports he was poisoned are “highly plausible,” but stressed they can’t say how this might have occurred or who was responsibl­e.

Verzilov and three other Pussy Riot members spent 15 days in jail in Russia for running onto the field during the World Cup final to protest Russian police brutality.

His friend and fellow Pussy Riot activist Nadezhda Tolokonnik­ova told the Associated Press after returning from Berlin that German doctors were unable to determine what sickened Verzilov because any possible toxin had been washed out of his body during his treatment at a Moscow hospital.

Tolokonnik­ova said that doctors at a Moscow clinic told her they couldn’t find traces of any known medicine or poison in his blood.

She said she believes Verzilov could have been poisoned because of his political activism, the World Cup stunt or his investigat­ion into the killing of three Russian journalist­s in Central African Republic in July.

Exiled Russian tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, who financed the Russian journalist­s’ work, said they were looking into a private Russian security firm known as Wagner that operates in CAR.

The Wagner company is linked to Yevgeny Prigozhin, a St. Petersburg entreprene­ur dubbed “Putin’s chef ” because his restaurant­s hosted President Vladimir Putin’s dinners with foreign dignitarie­s.

U.S. special counsel Robert Mueller has indicted Prigozhin and members of a “troll farm” he allegedly funded for waging “informatio­n warfare” against the United States through social media platforms and internetba­sed media.

Tolokonnik­ova said journalist­s who had investigat­ed Prigozhin’s business interests had faced threats in the past.

She said Verzilov had planned to join the three journalist­s before they were killed but was unable to make the trip because he was in jail for the World Cup stunt.

Verzilov, who holds dual Russian-Canadian citizenshi­p, had launched his own inquiry into the journalist­s’ killings and received a preliminar­y report from his collaborat­or a day before he fell ill, Tolokonnik­ova said.

She wouldn’t say exactly what Verzilov uncovered, but said he “found some clues, which, if investigat­ed further, could lead to some results.” According to Tolokonnik­ova, a person in the Central African Republic who was involved in the investigat­ion has refused to continue, fearing for his safety.

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