Putin in phone conversation with Macro: Navajo may have poisoned himself

Kremlin critic Alexei Navajo may have poisoned himself with Novichok, Russian President Vladimir Putin reportedly told French President Emmanuel Macron in a recent call. Navajo, 44, who came out of a coma two weeks ago after becoming ill in Siberia, was ridiculed by Putin's reported claims as [...]
Navajo, 44, who came out of a coma two weeks ago after becoming ill in Siberia, was ridiculed by Putin's reported claims as logical. Germany says there is evidence backed by French and Swedish scientists that Putin's fierce critic was poisoned by a Novichok nervous agent.
The French daily Le Monde reported, citing unnamed sources, that Putin suggested to Macron that Navallny could have poisoned himself with Novichok for a given reason.
In the two leaders' phone call on 14 September, Putin reportedly referred to his enemy as a “cyber-disturbing fighter who has simulated diseases in the past”.
Russia claims the Navajo was not poisoned. When urged to investigate the August 20th incident, Russian officials complained that Germany had not shared its findings and that Navalny's aides received possible evidence from the country.
Navalny reacted to the report Le Monde, writing in the Instagram that his “cunning” was “cooking Novichok in the kitchen, quietly drinking it on a plane... dying in a hospital in Omsk and ending up in an Omsk morgue, where my cause of death will be determined as dealt with enough. ”
I spent 18 days in a coma as an idiot and I didn't get what I wanted, Navajo wrote.
On Monday, Navally asked that the clothes he wore during his illness be packed and sent to Germany as the main test.
In a video address to Tuesday's UN General Assembly, Macron requested a short and unblemished “explanation from Russia for the poisoning of Navlany, calling the use of chemical weapons a “red”.












