Alexei Navalny: Putin Critic 'Probably Poisoned' – Doctors

The
Charité hospital released a statement saying "clinical evidence suggests intoxication
through a substance belonging to the group of cholinesterase inhibitors".
His
condition was "serious but not life-threatening" the statement said.
He
fell ill on an internal flight in Russia on Thursday.
Video
appeared to show Mr Navalny, a dogged critic of the Kremlin, writhing in agony
on the flight from Tomsk in Siberia to Moscow.
His
supporters suspect poison was placed in a cup of tea he drank at the airport in
Tomsk.
Mr
Navalny's flight made an emergency landing in Omsk where he was first treated.
On Friday, doctors there at first said he was too ill to be moved but then
allowed him to board a medical evacuation flight, which landed in Berlin on
Saturday morning.
Russian
doctors had earlier insisted that no poison had been found in his body and
suggested a metabolic disorder caused by low blood sugar.
"The exact
substance is not yet known," the hospital said. "Widespread analysis
has begun. The effect of the poison - i.e. the inhibition of cholinesterase in
the organism - has been proven several times and in independent
laboratories."
Mr
Navalny is being treated with an antidote - atropine.
But
the clinical outcome remained unclear, the statement said, and warned of
possible effects on the nervous system.
The
opposition leader is in intensive care and is still in an artificial coma.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe
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