Putin's biggest critic, Navajo out of a coma

The German hospital that is treating Russian opposition leader Alexei Navally has said the state of the Kremlin critic is “improved” and that he is “responding to verbal incentives”. The Charite Hospital in Berlin said by a statement Monday that the 44-year-old is “removed from an educational coma” and that “is leaving mechanical ventilation”. [...]
The German hospital that is treating Russian opposition leader Alexei Navally has said the state of the Kremlin critic is “improved” and that he is “responding to verbal incentives”.
The Charite Hospital in Berlin has said by a statement Monday that the 44-year-old is “removed from an educational coma” and that “is leaving mechanical ventilation”.
However, the hospital has said it is too early “to assess the long-term potential effects of its heavy poisoning”.
Germany has said Navalny was poisoned in Siberia last month with nervous agents of the Soviet-era military category Novicok.
Navalny, politician and corruption researcher, simultaneously one of the biggest critics of Russian President Vladimir Putin, is sick on August 20th on the plane, while traveling from Siberia to Moscow.
The plane has been forced to make an emergency landing in the city of Omsk so that Navajo can be taken to the hospital.
After the Siberian hospital, he was later transferred to a hospital in Berlin, where doctors said last week that it was possible that Navajo was poisoned.
Ivan Zhudanov, a supporter of Navalny, has said through a Twitter post that the Novico nervous agent can only be controlled by Russian intelligence agencies.











