Giada Oricchio November 02, 2022
Vladimir Putin has Parkinson’s and pancreatic cancer. The shocking revelation, reported by The Chron Online and The Sun, is included in some confidential Kremlin documents. Rumors of the 70-year-old Russian despot’s ill health have circulated for years, and some of his shaky public appearances or mysterious absences have fueled those rumours, which were promptly swept away by the Kremlin. But now emails have surfaced from a Russian intelligence source confirming Putin’s problems: he has a malignant pancreatic tumor and early stages of Parkinson’s disease.
The leaked documents read: “I can confirm that he has been diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease, which is in its early stages but is already progressing. This fact is denied and concealed in every possible way. In his inner circle it is said that he has prostate cancer in addition to pancreatic cancer”.
The former KGB agent is said to be taking numerous medications, particularly heavy anti-inflammatory steroids, and would receive innovative injections (from Israel) to stop or at least slow the spread of cancer. The treatments are invasive and cause him severe pain, a swollen face, and other side effects like memory lapses. In a recent photo, Vladimir Putin’s right hand showed a prominent black spot, a sign of repeated IV treatments.
The Chron on line also recalls that the Telegram General SVR channel reported last week that the Russian President’s relatives were worried about a persistent cough, constant nausea and loss of appetite. Putin has reportedly lost 18 kilos since invading Ukraine on February 24, a thinness seen by the elite in Russia as a “sign of the leader’s rapidly deteriorating health” and also the prelude to a war over his successor becomes.