Bellingcat – One of Navaln’s poisoners followed Kara-Murz before being poisoned



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According to investigators at Bellingcat, The Insider, and Der Spiegel, FSB agents began following Kar-Murz’s policy three months before his first poisoning in May 2015. The agents followed him on his way to Tomsk, St. Petersburg, Kaliningrad and Kazan.

According to investigators, FSB agent Alexander Samofal, who followed activist Nikita Isayev before his poisoning in 2019, “accompanied” Kara-Murz on all four trips. However, he did not belong to the group of officers who followed the opposition Alexei Navalna before poisoning him with the nerve paralyzing substance Novičiok.

Konstantin Kudriavtsev, from whom A. Navaln obtained fraudulent information about the operation, followed V. Kara-Murz on one of the trips.

VIDEO: Alexei Navaln called his poison


Two days after returning from Kazan to Moscow, Kara-Murza felt bad. According to investigators, he may have been poisoned in an apartment in Moscow where he lived alone and whose staircase did not have video cameras.

It is not ruled out that agents smeared the politician’s shorts with poison in Kazan, and the poison only worked when he returned to Moscow. The investigators note that they have no data confirming the movement of agents in Moscow during that period.

V. Kara-Murzai was diagnosed with heart failure and was not allowed to be transferred abroad for treatment. Finally, the politician recovered.

V.Kara-Murza was again poisoned on February 2, 2017. Investigators from Bellingcat, The Insider, and Der Spiegel have no evidence that FSB agents were near him at the time.

VIDEO: A. Navalnas last words before addressing the interrogation isolator – urging not to be afraid and to go outside


Previously, the researchers announcedthat the Navaln poisoners are possibly responsible for the deaths of three more people, including the aforementioned N. Isaev.

He followed A. Navalns

In August last year, A. Navalnas felt bad on a plane flying from Tomsk to Moscow. The plane crashed in Omsk, the opposition was treated at a local hospital and then allowed to fly to Berlin.

Studies in laboratories in Germany, France and Sweden, as well as the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), have shown that he has been poisoned by one of the nerve paralyzing substances Novičiok, developed in the Soviet Union.

In December, A. Navalnas, posing as an FSB chemical weapons expert and assistant to the head of the Security Council, Nikolai Patrushev, provoked Agent K. Kudriavtsev to tell about the operation.

The activist posted an audio clip, a transcript of a telephone conversation and a video recording his conversation with K. Kudriavtsev on his blog.

The latter revealed that the strike team did not expect the pilot of the plane in which A. Navaln flew from Tomsk to Moscow to land the liner in Omsk, that the target would not have survived had it not landed. After all, there was more poison hidden in A. Navalnas underwear than necessary.

Investigators revealed that FSB agents have been regularly following A. Navalnas since 2017.

“These operations were close to the opposition activist in the days and hours when he was poisoned with a chemical combat weapon,” Bellingcat said, identifying 37 trips since 2017 when Navalna was followed by one or more of the agents.



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