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Alexei Navalny's death: European states say rare frog toxin likely used
Summary
Several European countries, including the UK, have blamed the Kremlin for the death of Alexei Navalny and say investigators reported a poison developed from a toxin in a rare frog was likely used. The BBC Newshour programme carried those claims and included reactions from a friend of Navalny and a filmmaker who made a documentary about him.
Content
Several European countries, including the UK, have publicly attributed responsibility for the death of Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny to the Kremlin. They reported that investigators believe a poison developed from a toxin found in a rare frog was likely used. The BBC Newshour programme covered those developments and included reactions from a friend of Navalny and from an Oscar-winning director who produced a documentary about him. The same episode also featured an interview with Gisele Pelicot about her memoir and a paleontological discovery in Costa Rica.
Reported facts:
- Several European countries, including the UK, have blamed the Kremlin for Alexei Navalny's death.
- Officials and reports cited the likely use of a poison developed from a toxin in a rare frog.
- The BBC Newshour episode presented reactions from a friend of Navalny and from a documentary filmmaker.
- No specific legal or procedural next step was reported in the programme.
Summary:
The statements from European countries attribute responsibility and say a toxin derived from a rare frog was likely involved, while the BBC programme relayed personal reactions and commentary. Undetermined at this time.
