New evidence reveals Putin critic Alexei Navalny ‘was poisoned before his death’

New evidence reveals Putin critic Alexei Navalny ‘was poisoned before his death’
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New evidence reveals Putin critic Alexei Navalny ‘was poisoned before his death’
Author: Josh Layton
Published: Feb, 16 2025 07:00

A leaked report into Alexei Navalny’s death provides ‘compelling evidence’ that he was poisoned, according to the author of a best-selling book about the opposition leader. John Sweeney said a Russian detective had recorded how Vladimir Putin’s fiercest critic vomited and went into convulsions shortly before his death a year ago today. The report was filed by a detective logging Navalny’s possessions at a harsh penal colony in the Arctic Circle where he was being held on what were widely considered to be politically motivated charges.

Image Credit: Metro

The 47-year-old’s supporters believe he was murdered and that Moscow covered up the crime, including by removing the references to the symptoms noted by the detective. ‘There’s no question that Alexei Navalny was poisoned,’ Sweeney told Metro. ‘A detective, Alexander Varapaev, bagged all of Navalny’s stuff after his death, including a copy of Tolstoy’s War and Peace, lots of pills, a breathing mask for his asthma, loo roll and clothes and coats.

Image Credit: Metro

‘The last items Varapaev logged are swabs and specs of vomit. ‘They never made it into the official list of his possessions. Somebody deletes the references to the vomit. ‘Then he writes a report saying Navalny was vomiting and was suffering from severe abdominal pain and convulsions and loses consciousness. ‘That is all compelling evidence that he was poisoned.’. The journalist writes in the latest edition of his book Murder in the Gulag about the life and death of Navalny that the references were removed, ‘almost as if someone high up in the Kremlin didn’t want people to know that [Putin] had had Navalny poisoned.’.

Image Credit: Metro

Unearthed by Russian investigative journalist Roman Dobrokhotov of The Insider media outlet, the report is part of what Sweeney describes in his book as ‘Cluedo cards’ laid out for all to see. The activist’s death while serving a 19-year sentence followed a string of murders including that of Alexander Litvinenko, a former spy turned Kremlin critic who was poisoned by radioactive Polonium in London, and the Salisbury assassination attempt against Russian dissident Sergei Skripal with nerve agent Novichock.

Image Credit: Metro

The latter hit claimed the life of Dawn Sturgess. In both cases, Russian hitmen working for Putin’s regime were identified by the UK authorities as being to blame. Russia has denied being involved in the murders. ‘We can’t prove Novichok was used because the deal for Navalny’s funeral was that the family would only be allowed the body if no medical tests were carried out,’ Sweeney said. ‘It’s not right but that’s the horrible deal his mother ended up accepting. This is compelling evidence that Navalny was poisoned and I would argue that the only person who has the power to poison the leader of the opposition in one of the most secure prisons in the whole country is the ruler, Vladimir Putin.’.

In August 2020, Navalny narrowly survived being poisoned with Novichok, which led to him falling ill on a flight between Siberia and Moscow and going into a coma. He was imprisoned the following year and subjected to brutal and inhumane treatment in the Russian penal system, with his last stop being the so-called ‘Polar Wolf’ prison in Kharp, northern Russia, about 1,900 km north-east of Moscow.

Navalny spent a total of 283 days in a punishment cell on ‘trumped-up pretexts’ up until his death, according to the Anti-Corruption Foundation (ACF) he founded. The Russian prison service said in a statement released at the time that Navalny ‘felt unwell after a walk, almost immediately losing consciousness.’. In March 2024, Russian spy chief Sergei Naryshkin claimed that the prisoner had died of natural causes but did not go into details.

The ACF has described Navalny’s death as ‘murder’ and accused Moscow of trying to cover up the crime. But the opposition leader’s voice has not been silenced. The Terminator 2 melody from his favourite film was played as his coffin was lowered into the ground at a cemetery in Moscow, with the rebel’s last joke of ‘I’ll be back’ being aimed at Putin’s ‘neurosis’, according to Sweeney.

While there is no clear challenge to the Russian president’s rule, the Ukraine war has led to huge losses among Moscow’s forces and the first annexation of Russian territory since World War Two. ‘At the moment it looks incredibly bleak but then at the end of Terminator 2 the machine chooses to be destroyed to prevent the system from wiping out humanity,’ Sweeney said. ‘The film sent out the message that if you can create a machine with empathy, it is not our enemy.

‘Navalny was not a saint, he had a brush with the far right between 2000 and 2010 and it’s true that at that point he was an arrogant prick and a bit of an imperialist, but towards the end he wasn’t. ‘If anyone doubts me, I would say watch the wonderful documentary in Navalny’s name which won an Oscar. ‘It shows how he recovered from the hideous assassination attempt by poison to turn the tables on the Russian police state in a way that was brilliant and really funny.

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