The Western press made headlines over the weekend when it was reported that three doctors who had treated Russian opposition Alexei Navalny were either dead or missing.
The Russian newspaper RT recently published a commentary mocking the Western media that have launched conspiracy theories about the incident involving Russian opposition activist Alexei Navalny, who once accused himself of winning the lottery. Novichok poison and was initially treated by Russian doctors at Omsk Emergency Hospital.
Dr. Alexander Murakhovsky is the chief physician of Omsk Hospital, promoted after Navalny was initially treated there. Photo: RT Accordingly, Dr. Alexander Murakhovsky, one of the three doctors who directly treated Mr. Navalny, is said to have disappeared “mysteriously” after hunting. British media Reuters, The Guardian, the US BBC all simultaneously reported that the last of the three doctors who had treated Mr. Navalny was now missing. On May 9, as Russia was celebrating Victory Day, the Internal Affairs Service in Omsk made an announcement about a man in his fifties who had been separated from his friends. He is said to have not been seen since going into the woods in an off-road vehicle. To make matters worse, local residents say they have spotted bears in the area. Western media outlets at the time raised a series of theories about the possibility that this person might have been assassinated in a “speak-up” plot related to possible issues in the Navalny case. The Russian opposition figure was believed to have been poisoned by Novichok but the doctors treating it in Omsk at the time, including Dr. Alexander Murakhovsky, confirmed to the press that they did not identify it as a nerve agent like what described about Novichok. The Western media has been so sensitive to information about Novichok that it has linked the failure to find Dr. Alexander Murakhovsky with the deaths of the doctors associated with Navalny: The disappearance of Dr. Sergey Maksimishin and a female Another doctor died of a stroke. The Sun, the UK’s most widely read newspaper, asserts that Sergey Maksimishin “was poisoned to prevent him from disclosing a Kremlin attack on Novichok”. The unnamed source cited by reporters said that “the reason he was liquidated was because he was willing to share information about the treatment he had access to.” A second doctor at the clinic later died of a stroke, adding to the conviction of a conspiracy theory involving Novichok. Bill Browder, a hedge fund manager who led accusations of anti-Russian sanctions, said the news was “incredible”. “After the two doctors who treated and saved Alexei Navalny at the hospital in Omsk died, one of the three has now disappeared on a hunting trip,” he added. Andreas Umland, a research fellow at Stockholm’s Center for Eastern European Studies, thinks even further, suggesting that Dr. Murakhovsky went into the woods with employees of Moscow’s top domestic security agency during the day. a plot to “destroy the word”. “The FSB’s signal to Russian society seems clear. Not to interfere in our affairs or other things that are not the doctor’s duty,” he reasoned. According to Reuters, the wife of Dr. Alexander Murakhovsky confirmed that he went into the forest and did not return after more than a day had passed. Alexander Murakhovsky in an interview with the press about Navalny’s treatment. German doctors confirm that the initial treatment of Russian doctors saved the life of the Russian opposition. But two days later Dr. Murakhovsky was back, healthy, and he didn’t even know there had been a search for him. Silence for 2 days, the Russian newspaper RT then commented that, a man can chase the animal he wants to hunt for 1 or 2 days is probably not a problem, but for Dr. Murakhovsky is completely different. Perhaps he couldn’t think of what was said about him during the past two days. The newspaper also said that regarding the deaths of two doctors at Omsk Hospital, both were speculated by the Western media. Doctors at Omsk hospital confirmed, within days [Navalny] receiving treatment at the hospital, doctor Sergei Maksimishin was on sick leave and was “not involved in Navalny’s care”. As for the female doctor at the clinic who died of a stroke, the evidence shows that the death was natural, convincingly, unlike the Western media alleging without correction of misinformation. truth in Russia.
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