May, Friday 17, 2024

Alexei Navalny's remains to undergo two-week chemical analysis, as communicated to his family


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The family of Alexei Navalny, a prominent Russian critic of President Putin who recently died in prison, has been told that his body will not be released for another two weeks. Navalny's mother was informed that his body was being held for "chemical analysis," according to a representative for Navalny. Russian authorities have not confirmed the location of the body, and all attempts to locate it have been denied. Navalny's wife accused the authorities of hiding his body and directly blamed President Putin for his death. She also alleged that the body was being kept until any traces of the nerve agent Novichok had disappeared. In a heartfelt video, Navalny's wife called on viewers to join her in seeking justice for her husband. Navalny's death in prison was reported last Friday, and his mother and lawyer immediately traveled to the prison colony. However, their attempts to locate the body have been repeatedly blocked by the prison and local authorities. The Kremlin stated that an investigation into Navalny's death is ongoing, but no results have been released so far. Navalny's spokeswoman stated that investigators informed Navalny's mother that the body would not be released for two weeks due to ongoing "chemical analysis." She expressed her belief that the authorities were waiting for any traces of Novichok to disappear from Navalny's body. Navalny was a prominent figure in Russia's opposition movement and was serving a politically-motivated 19-year sentence. Western leaders have placed the blame for Navalny's death squarely on President Putin. Both the EU and the US are considering imposing new sanctions on Russia in response to the incident, and the UK Foreign Secretary expects similar actions from the G7 countries. The Kremlin spokesperson criticized Western politicians' comments as "arrogant" and "unacceptable," while Russian prison authorities claimed that Navalny had suffered from "sudden death syndrome."