MOSCOW: Russian officials said on Friday that metabolic problems and pancreatitis caused Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny to fall ill in August, ruling out findings by European labs that he was poisoned with Novichok.
In August, the 44-year-old anti-graft campaigner collapsed on a flight from Siberia to Moscow and was eventually transferred for treatment to Germany where experts ruled he was poisoned with the Soviet-designed nerve agent.
The interior ministryâs Siberian branch said doctors who treated Navalny for two days before he was flown to Berlin confirmed their diagnosis of âdisruption of carbohydrate metabolism and chronic pancreatitis.â
âThe diagnosis of âpoisoningâ... was not confirmed,â it said in a statement.
The interior ministry added that no poisonous substances were found on Navalnyâs clothes or on objects collected from his hotel or the airport cafe in the Siberian city of Tomsk where he was seen before the flight.
Navalny has claimed that Russian President Vladimir Putin is personally responsible for the poisoning, while the Kremlin has rejected all allegations it could have been involved.
The head of Russiaâs Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) Sergei Naryshkin also claimed Friday that NATO countries plotted to use a Russian opposition leader as a âsacred sacrificeâ to uphold the protest mood in the country.
Navalny said it was âfunnyâ that both the interior ministry statement and Naryshkinâs interview with state television were released on the same day.
âIt seems NATO countries convinced me to start a fatal diet,â Navalny wrote on Twitter.
Navalnyâs poisoning has put further strain on Russiaâs already fragile relationship with Western Europe.
In October, EU sanctioned several senior Russian officials over the poisoning, saying the attack with Novichok could not have been carried out without the complicity of the FSB security service, the defense ministry and Putinâs office.
Separately, the Russian foreign ministry accused Germany of using âmade up pretextsâ to avoid cooperating in investigating the incident. Moscow called on Berlin to âabstain from further artificial politicization of the situation.â
In a phone call with German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas on Thursday, Russiaâs top diplomat Sergei Lavrov highlighted the âunacceptabilityâ of Berlin ârefusing to fulfil its international legal commitments,â the foreign ministry in Moscow said.
Also on Thursday, police raided the offices of Navalnyâs Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK) in Moscow and removed equipment. The new raid was linked to a criminal case against Ivan Zhdanov, the foundationâs head, for failing to implement a court order.
A court in October last year ordered that Navalny, his associate Lyubov Sobol and the Anti-Corruption Foundation must jointly pay almost 88 million rubles ($1.1 million) to a catering firm linked to Kremlin associate Yevgeny Prigozhin.
Navalny has vowed to return to Russia after fully recovering in Germany.
Russia rules out Navalny poisoning, diagnoses pancreatitis
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Updated 06 November 2020
Russia rules out Navalny poisoning, diagnoses pancreatitis

- Campaigner collapsed on flight from Siberia to Moscow and was eventually transferred for treatment to Germany where experts ruled he was poisoned with a Soviet-designed nerve agent
- Interior ministryâs Siberian branch said, doctors who treated Navalny before he was flown to Berlin confirmed their diagnosis of âdisruption of carbohydrate metabolism and chronic pancreatitisâ