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https://i-invdn-com.akamaized.net/trkd-images/LYNXMPEG8A0CJ_L.jpgThe ministry said it was preparing another request for legal assistance from Germany, where Navalny was airlifted to hospital last month after what Berlin says was a poison attack on him with a Novichok nerve agent.
In a statement, the interior ministry’s transport department in Siberia said it wanted to send investigators to work alongside German colleagues on the case, after reports that Navalny had emerged from a coma.
“This request will include an application for the possible presence of Russian internal affairs investigators… and a Russian specialist when German colleagues are conducting investigations with Navalny, doctors and experts,” the ministry said in a statement.
It also requested permission to ask clarifying and additional questions.
The request appeared to have no chance of success, given that Germany says it has already established the presence of Novichok and demanded explanations from Moscow – a call strongly echoed by other Western countries. Some German politicians have called for additional sanctions against Russia.
Russia has not opened a formal criminal investigation and is sticking to its position that it needs hard evidence from Germany that Navalny was indeed poisoned.
Transport police in Tomsk had established a timeline of events leading up to Navalny falling ill, the ministry said. It listed a hotel, restaurant, flat and coffee shop Navalny had visited, and said he had drunk wine and an alcoholic cocktail.
In the days following Navalny’s illness, his spokeswoman strongly denied allegations he had consumed alcohol.
The ministry said police had interviewed five of the six people it said accompanied Navalny on the journey when he fell ill. It said it was looking for a sixth person it named as Marina Pevchikh, a UK resident who flew to Germany on Aug. 22 and whose whereabouts it said were currently being established.