Vladimir Putin says he personally allowed opposition critic Alexei Navalny to be treated in Germany

Russian President Vladimir Putin says he allowed Alexei Navalny to travel abroad for treatment despite travel restrictions placed upon him due to a criminal investigation.

Russian opposition leader and anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny at a memorial march in Moscow in February 2020.

Russian opposition leader and anti-corruption activist Alexei Navalny at a memorial march in Moscow in February 2020. Source: EPA

Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that he personally authorised Alexei Navalny to travel to Germany for treatment, after the opposition leader was poisoned with a nerve agent.

"As soon as the wife of this citizen appealed to me, straight away I told prosecutors to check the possibility of him going abroad for treatment," Mr Putin said in a televised appearance, noting that Mr Navalny was allowed to leave Russia despite travel restrictions imposed over a criminal investigation.

Mr Putin's top foe collapsed on a plane in late August and was taken to hospital in Siberia for two days before being flown out to Berlin, where tests found he had been poisoned with Novichok, a Soviet-designed nerve agent.
Mr Navalny has been subjected to frequent legal proceedings in Russia that his supporters say are politically motivated.

Bailiffs put a freeze on his flat and bank accounts days after the poisoning following on from a ruling late last year that he and an aide should pay ($1.2 million) to Moskovsky Shkolnik, a catering company that makes school dinners.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin at the annual meeting of the Valdai Discussion Club via video conference outside Moscow, Russia, this week. Source: AAP
President Putin said that even though Mr Navalny was not allowed to leave the country he "immediately" asked the Prosecutor General's Office for permission and "he left".

The EU earlier this month hit six members of Mr Putin's inner circle with sanctions over the poisoning.

The bloc said that the attack with the Novichok could not have been carried out without the complicity of the FSB, the defence ministry and President Putin's executive office.
Tests carried out by German experts, later confirmed by France, Sweden and the UN's Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), showed he had been poisoned with the Soviet-designed nerve agent.


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Published 23 October 2020 5:59am
Source: AFP, SBS



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