Putin’s tea gift?… Sudden death of a Russian doctor who cured Navalni’s addiction

Putin’s tea gift?… Sudden death of a Russian doctor who cured Navalni’s addiction

Gyu-Hwan Seong, reporter at Busan.com [email protected]


Input: 2021-02-05 17:41:02Revision: 2021-02-05 21:29:24Published: 2021-02-05 21:29:37

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Russia's opposition leader Alexei Navalni is a court in Moscow's Babushkinsky district for slandering and defaming a veteran who fought in World War II (Great Dog War) on the 5th. He attends and waits in a glass room installed in the courtroom.  yunhap news

Russia’s opposition leader Alexei Navalni is a court in Moscow’s Babushkinsky district for slandering and defaming a veteran who fought in World War II (Great Dog War) on the 5th. He attends and waits in a glass room installed in the courtroom. yunhap news

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s static opposition leader Alexey Navalni, who had been treated for poison addiction last summer, recently reported that a Russian doctor who cared for him died suddenly. Some have also raised suspicion of questionable death by Putin’s side.

On the 4th (local time), according to foreign media such as CNN in the United States, the Omsk emergency hospital in Russia made a statement that day and announced that Dr. Sergei Maximisin, a deputy doctor in charge of anesthesia and pain and critically ill patients, died suddenly at the age of 55. The hospital did not comment on the specific cause of death.

Maximi Xun was one of the senior doctors in the hospital, who was in charge of treatment at the hospital when Navalni fell into a coma due to poisoning symptoms in August last year. CNN reported that at the time, Maximi Xun did not even appear in a single press briefing. At the time, Omsk Hospital had announced to reporters that they found no signs of poison in Navalni, and that doctors did not view him as poisoned.

Maximisin’s sudden death occurred as Navalni was arrested and imprisoned immediately after returning home last month after receiving treatment for poison addiction in Germany, and protests spreading in Russia. In response to the death of Maximi Xin, which occurred amid growing anger and criticism from the United States and the international community for Navalni’s detention, some suspects that the Putin regime was assassinated to destroy the evidence in the Navalni case. have.

Leonid Volkov, a key member of Navalni, told CNN that “Maximishin was the highest figure in the department that treated Navalni and was responsible for the treatment of his coma.” As much as I knew more about the condition than anyone else, I cannot shake the possibility that he did not die naturally.” He added that he was doubtful whether an investigation into his cause would be conducted.

Busan.com reporter Seong Gyu-hwan [email protected], some Yonhap News

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