Oligarch Roman Abramovich is said to have been poisoned. Again, the Kremlin is held responsible. These are Putin’s secret poison kitchens.
Only on Tuesday did Ukraine’s Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba fuel speculation that Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich was poisoned during peace talks to resolve the war. “I advise all participants in negotiations with Russia not to drink or eat anything and, if possible, not to touch anything,” Kuleba told the Daily Mail on Tuesday.
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READ MORE: Day 34 of the war in Ukraine – the live ticker
The British medium also reports on other security measures in the negotiations in Turkey on Tuesday. Delegates are said to have been given cups of water with paper lids during the negotiations.
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s regime has been blamed for several poison attacks in the past. Above all, the numerous Russian secret services must play an important role. Putin’s poison cooks are said to work in these secret services (Photo gallery to click).
The list of alleged victims of Russian poison attacks is long:
Journalist Anna Politkovskaya
Poisoned after drinking tea on an Aeroflot flight in September 2004. Politkovskaya was shot dead in Moscow in October 2006.
Politician Viktor Yushchenko
After a dinner with the head of the Ukrainian domestic secret service in September 2004, the then Ukrainian presidential candidate had to be taken to the Rudolfinerhaus in Vienna. A life-threatening dioxin poisoning was found there. Marked by drunkenness, he won Ukraine’s presidential elections, ruled from 2005 to 2010 and set the country on a pro-Western course. When asked if he thinks Kremlin chief Putin ordered his poisoning, he eloquently says: “I know the answer, but I cannot pronounce it.” Europe must recognize that the greatest threat to its citizens is a Russia that uses medieval methods in the 21st century.
Former secret agent Alexander Litvinenko
He died after being poisoned with radioactive polonium in London in November 2006. On his deathbed, he blamed Putin for the deadly attack.
Vladimir Kara Murza
The then politician and opposition activist fell ill in May 2015 after an Aeroflot flight and complained of symptoms of poisoning. He was reportedly poisoned again in February 2017.
Former secret agent Sergei Skripal
He was found unconscious with his daughter Julia in Salisbury, UK, in 2018. British authorities later announced that the two had apparently been poisoned with the nerve agent Novichok.
Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny
Passed out on a flight from Tomsk to Moscow in August 2020 after being poisoned. Navalny survived and is now one of the most prominent faces of the Russian opposition.
Viktor Yushchenko in July 2004 and December 2004 with a completely disfigured face after the poisonous attack. STF / AFP / picturedesk.comFormer KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko on his deathbed shortly before his death in London. Litvinenko Family / EPA / picturedesk.com
Abramovich and two other members of the Ukrainian delegation complained of red, inflamed eyes, tearing and self-peeling skin on their face and hands after a meeting in Kiev on March 3. Abramovich was then taken to a clinic in Turkey. The symptoms clearly indicated poisoning with chemical warfare agents, a source is quoted in the media report by the investigative platform “Bellingcat” and the “Wall Street Journal”.
READ MORE: Putin’s Negotiator Suspected of Poisoning: Lost His Eyesight
Abramovich, one of Russia’s richest men, is considered a close confidant of Russian President Vladimir Putin and is currently traveling between Turkey, Russia and Ukraine in his role as a messenger of peace.
Confusion over possible multi-billionaire poisoning
But just a short time after the report appeared, Ukraine denied an alleged poison attack. . All members of the negotiating groups are working normally, said Mykhailo Podoliak. He added: “There’s a lot of speculation, different versions of conspiracies and elements of one or another information game in the information field right now.” US intelligence also doubts a poison attack on Abramovich. According to them, the symptoms are due to “environmental factors”, said the Reuters agency, citing an anonymous representative of the US security services. Moscow also rejected the report, according to the Daily Mail.
In contrast, an AFP source familiar with the Kiev-Moscow negotiations confirmed information from the Wall Street Journal. “Unfortunately, this actually happened,” the informed source told AFP.
Bellingcat editor-in-chief Christo Grozev emphasizes that the alleged attack on Abramovich was a warning to him from Kremlin radicals who wanted to sabotage the peace talks. The investigative journalist, who has already revealed the poisoned Kremlin attack by critic Alexei Navalny in 2020, maintains his account even after Ukraine’s denials.
“There are dozens of plausible and some even legitimate reasons for government officials to lie about this. There is no reason for us,” Grozev tweeted on Tuesday, referring to his partners and other media outlets. “We still don’t know exactly what happened or who did it. We know that on the day of the crucial negotiations something happened to three healthy people at the same time. Calling this ‘environmental influences’ is as plausible as saying Navalny had low sugar. in the blood.”
DAY 34 of the war in Ukraine: The situation in the “Today” news video
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