Marin Independent Journal

Navalny accuses Putin of being behind his poisoning

- ByDavidRis­ing and DariaLitvi­nova

Alexei Navalny has accused President Vladimir Putin of being behind his poisoningw­ith a Soviet-era nerve agent.

BERLIN » Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, who is recovering in Germany after being poisoned in Russia, said in comments published Thursday that only Russian President Vladimir Putin could have been behind the attack against him with a Soviet-era nerve agent.

Navalny’s supporters have frequently maintained that the poisoning could have only been ordered at the top level, although the Kremlin has repeatedly dismissed the allegation. German officials have said labs found traces of a chemical agent fromthe Novichok family in the Russian politician’s system.

Navalny,a corruption investigat­orwho is Putin’ s fiercest critic, was fl own to Germany two days after falling ill on Aug. 20 on a domestic flight in Russia. He spent 32 days in the hospital, 24 of themin intensive care, before doctors deemed his condition sufficient­ly improved for him to be discharged.

He has posted frequent comments online as his recovery has progressed, but in his first interview since the attack, he told Germany’s Der Spiegel, “I assert Putin was behind the crime,” according to an English-language copy of his comments the magazine published online.

“I have no other explanatio­n for what happened ,” Navalny ,44, said.

He asserted that his poisoning with a Novichok nerve agent only could have been ordered by the heads of Russia’s military, domestic, or foreign intelligen­ce agencies, officials who“can not make a decision like that without being instructed by Putin. They report to him.”

TheKremlin on Thursday said that “such accusation­s against the Russian president are absolutely groundless and unacceptab­le.”

“Someof these statements in the mentioned publicatio­n we consider offensive,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

Peskov charged that there was informatio­n that “specialist­s” from the CIA were working with Navalny“these days” and giving him instructio­ns.

“There is informatio­n that these instructor­s are working with him these days,” Peskov said. “Instructio­ns the patient is receiving are obvious. We have seen such lines of behavior more than once.”

In response to Peskov’s comments, Navalny on Thursday announced that he would sue the Kremlin spokesman and demanded that the alleged evidence of him working with the CIA be made public.

“If the authoritie­s, on behalf of which Peskov speaks, have evidence of thenonsens­e he is talking about, then it’s a matter of Russia’s state security, and I demand that this evidence be published,” Navalny said in his blog.

Before he was transferre­d to Berlin for treatment, Navalny spent two days in a coma in a hospital in the Siberian city of Omsk, where Russian doctors said they found no trace of any poisoning.

German chemical weapons experts determined that he was poisoned with the Soviet-era Novichok, the class of nerve agent that Britain said was used in a 2018 attack on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, England. Labs in France and Sweden corroborat­ed the German findings.

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