A scientist involved in the nerve gas industry Novichuk apologizes to Navalny



[ad_1]

He added that the Kremlin’s main opponent probably ingested the poison because it appeared that no other people were poisoned.

On the other hand, another scientist who was involved in the Novichuk industry named Vladimir Oglev, for the Russian research site, considered Prokat that the survival of Navalny indicated that the poison was absorbed through the skin and not ingested.

People close to Navalny said they collected evidence in a hotel room that galleries had left in Tomsk, Siberia, just before she fell ill in late August.

They added that a German laboratory found traces of Novichok in a bottle of water that was in his room and was sent to Germany.

A Russian scientist, known to state media for having worked on creating a Novichok, questioned Phil Mirzayinov’s comments on Sunday.

“>

“I offer my deepest apologies to Navalny for participating in this criminal industry that led to the production of the substance that poisoned him,” Phil Mirzayinov said Saturday during an interview with opposition station TV Rhine.

Mirzayinov, who currently resides in the United States, was the first to reveal Novichok’s existence in articles published in the early 1990s.

Navalny, who felt ill during a trip to Russia on August 20, is still recovering in a Berlin hospital, where he will learn to pronounce again from his alleged poisoning with this poisonous gas.

Moscow refused to hold him responsible for what happened, despite the results of German, French and Swedish laboratories, which concluded that he had been poisoned.

Three former Soviet scientists, now in their 70s, have publicly confirmed their involvement in the making of the Novichok.

“Navalny will have to be patient, but he will recover again,” Phil Mirzayinov said, waiting for a period of “up to a year” for recovery.

He added that the Kremlin’s main opponent probably ingested the poison because it appeared that no other people were poisoned.

On the other hand, another scientist who was involved in the Novichuk industry named Vladimir Oglev, for the Russian research site, considered Prokat that the survival of Navalny indicated that the poison was absorbed through the skin and not ingested.

People close to Navalny said they collected evidence in a hotel room that galleries had left in Tomsk, Siberia, just before she fell ill in late August.

They added that a German laboratory found traces of Novichok in a bottle of water that was in his room and was sent to Germany.

A Russian scientist, known to state media for having worked on the creation of a Novichok, questioned Phil Mirzayinov’s comments on Sunday.



[ad_2]