Navalny says 'able to breathe' unaided after suspected poisoning
Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny said
Tuesday he was able to breathe unaided, in his first public comments after his
alleged poisoning in Siberia last month.
"Hello, this is Navalny," he said in a
post on Instagram, appearing with his wife Yulia and two children in the Berlin
hospital where he was flown for treatment after falling ill.
Wearing a hospital gown, he looked gaunt and barely
smiled while his wife next to him beamed.
"Yesterday I was able to breathe on my own all
day," he said in his first social media post since he was poisoned with
what Germany says was a Novichok nerve agent.
"I really liked it. It's an amazing process and
underestimated by many. I recommend it," he joked, telling followers,
"I miss you".
The 44-year-old lawyer and outspoken Kremlin critic
fell ill on a flight from the Siberian city of Tomsk to Moscow after a trip to
support opposition candidates in local elections.
Germany said Monday that French and Swedish labs had
independently confirmed findings by doctors in Berlin that Navalny was poisoned
with a Novichok nerve agent.
Navalny's allies say the use of the banned chemical
weapon means that only the Russian state could be responsible.
Russia has angrily dismissed the findings, saying
its doctors found no trace of poison.
Despite international calls for Russia to carry out
a transparent investigation or risk sanctions, it has not opened a criminal
probe.



