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March 30, 2022 Roman Abramovich Poisoned With First World War Chemical Agent

Roman Abramovich Poisoned With First World War Chemical Agent

Chelsea owner, Roman Abramovich reportedly asked 'are we dying?' after being poisoned with a chemical agent at the Ukraine-Russia peace talks. 

The billionaire was suffering severe symptoms after coming into contact with World War One chemical warfare agent Chloropicrin or a low dosage of Novichok, experts have said. 

Investigative journalist Christo Grozev, who led research into the shocking incident, said a team of experts agreed the wartime chemical was the most likely one used in the attack.

It has since emerged the billionaire felt so unwell that he asked the scientist examining him if he was dying, reported the New York Times. 

Abramovich and other peace negotiators suffered debilitating symptoms including temporary blindness on a mission in early March to Kyiv seeking an end to the war.

Abramovich required hospital treatment in Istanbul after flying to Turkey from the talks in Ukraine.

One theory for the alleged poisoning is that hardliners close to Vladimir Putin wanted to disrupt peace moves and prolong the war.

In a new interview, Grozov spoke in Russian to tell Popular Politics YouTube channel that all the experts had agreed the most likely source of their symptoms was Chloropicrin, a chemical warfare agent used in World War One and stockpiled in World War Two.

'All the experts who communicated with them, studied their photographs and carried out personal examinations,' he said.

The experts 'all said this was not a coincidence, not food poisoning, not an allergy'.

He said: 'They suggested this [?hlorpicrin] and other war agents.

'They agreed on one of them and disagreed on the others.

'They also all agreed that the only way to detect the agent was to bring these people to a laboratory, or to send their blood sample to a laboratory with means to detect war agents.'

He was asked: 'Which agent did they all agree on?'

Grozev replied: '?hlorpicrin - this is the agent giving nearly all of the detected symptoms.

'The only minus of that hypothesis was that Chlorpicrin usually emits quite a strong smell, which means it is quite hard to give it without it being noticed.

'But then one of the specialists said there were developments of this agent - without smell.

'Other suggestions even included a low dosage of Novichok, which could have led to these symptoms according to one really knowledgeable expert.'

Novichok was used in the poisoning of GRU double agent Sergei Skripal at his home in Salisbury, England, which also hospitalised his daughter Yulia.

The attack was seen as being by the GRU - Russian military intelligence.

Novichok was also deployed to poison Vladimir Putin foe Alexei Navalny in Siberia.

He needed life-saving medical treatment in Germany before returning to Russia where he was jailed.

Grozev said that it had not been possible with Abramovich and the other victims to carry out sufficiently deep tests on the cause of the poisoning.

'During the following weeks the symptoms were gradually disappearing, and since the group… was indeed engaged in negotiations, flying from one place to the other, it was very hard to find a day when they could get to a European capital with high-quality laboratory,' he said.

'So sadly by the moment it was possible, the metabolic processes made it impossible to detect the agent.

'Sadly it will remain a big mystery…

'But it was an absurd period when these people were responsible for finding some peaceful solution in the war.

'In any other situation they would have flown where they were told to understand what it was, but in that situation they prioritised negotiations above their health.

'Possibly we will never learn.'

Grozev hit out at the US for initially claiming that 'environmental' factors had led to the Abramovich poisoning, and also Ukraine which downplayed the poisoning.

He told the YouTube channel: 'To answer your question on why people lie [about poisoning] - they lie for many different reasons.

'The Ukrainian authorities can be lying because they don't want this information to become public, not to spike the process of negotiations.

'Quite possibly this is the same reason why Americans came out with this absurd and honestly offensive statement that it wasn't poisoning, but some environmental factors.

'This resembles Kremlin's explanations that Navalny had issues with glucose.'

 
 
 
March 23, 2022 Zelenksy Says Russian Fighter Pilots Will Face Justice

Zelenksy Says Russian Fighter Pilots Will Face Justice

Volodymyr Zelensky, the president of Ukraine, has warned Russian fighter pilots performing missions in his nation that they will be prosecuted.

“You will be held accountable one way or another,” Zelensky said on Wednesday.

“Today or tomorrow, it doesn’t matter that much.

“The important thing is that it’s inevitable.”

As an example he mentioned a Russian fighter jet shot down by Ukrainian forces over the besieged city of Mariupol.

And this will happen to anyone who kills our people, peaceful people in our peaceful country,” the Ukrainian president said.

He added that Russian pilots apparently have no idea of the gravity of the orders they are carrying out.

“The killing of civilians is a crime.”

Ukraine claims to have shot down about 100 Russian fighter planes and bombers since Russia invaded its western neighbour nearly four weeks ago.

The claim could not be verified independently.

 

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March 23, 2022 Controversial Teenage Skater Kamila Valieva Set To Compete Again

Controversial Teenage Skater Kamila Valieva Set To Compete Again

Controversial figure skater Kamila Valieva is poised to compete in Russia this weekend despite a doping case looming over her head.

The 15-year-old was eliminated from medal contention in the women's singles event at the 2022 Winter Olympics in February.

Despite a failing drug test discovered after she had assisted the Russian Olympic Committee in winning the team event, she was allowed to compete.

Valieva will compete in Saransk for the Channel One Cup.

It's a Russian-only competition held in conjunction with the World Championships.

Because of sanctions implemented following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, figure skaters from Russia and Belarus are barred from competing in the World Championships in Montpellier, France, which run from Wednesday to Sunday.

Valieva's case was one of the most infamous tales from the Beijing Olympics. The teenager was hailed as the first woman to land a quadruple leap in a Winter Olympics, which she did in the team event.

However, a failed drugs test in December 2021, in which Valieva tested positive for the banned cardiac medicine trimetazidine, was discovered only days before the team event medal celebration.

After a series of appeals and re-appeals, a court verdict lifted her provisional ban, allowing her to compete in the singles.

The Court of Arbitration for Sport (Cas) cited her age and the timing of the test result, which arrived during the Games and roughly six weeks after the sample was taken, as "exceptional circumstances."

It further said that not allowing Valieva to compete would cause her "irreparable harm."

Valieva, on the other hand, departed the arena in tears after a series of slips and falls dropped her from first place after the short program to fourth place after the free skate - and out of contention for the medals.

The doping case is still being worked out. The Russian anti-doping organization (Rusada) has six months from the date of Valieva's offence notification to make a judgment on any consequence. This could result in the decision being postponed until august.

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March 21, 2022 France Freezes €850m of Russian Assets

France Freezes €850m of Russian Assets

France has frozen and seized assets of Russian oligarchs to the tune of around 850 million euros (938 million dollars).

Property worth 539 million euros had been blocked, Le Maire French Economy Minister Bruno said.

He said another 150 million euros from private accounts at French banks have been frozen and two yachts worth 150 million euros have been seized.

France established a taskforce to implement EU sanctions against Russian oligarchs or those close to President Vladimir Putin.

It is tasked with finding their assets in France and identifying the owners of bank accounts, luxury villas and yachts, which is a complicated endeavour due to the many shell companies used to hide identities.

 

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