China News Agency, Moscow, September 3 (Reporter Wang Xiujun) In response to the German claim that the Russian opposition Navaline was attacked by the "Novichok" nerve agent, Russian Foreign Intelligence Director Naryshkin was in Moscow on the 3rd It was told to the media that the poisoning of Navalny might be false, and it cannot be ruled out that it was a provocation by Western intelligence agencies.

  Naryshkin said that Russian doctors conducted a thorough examination on Navaline and ensured that there were no signs of poisoning when he was in Russia.

  Savayev, the chief toxicologist of the Russian Omsk Region and the Siberian Federal District, told the media that after Navalny was hospitalized, no poison was found in his body.

He emphasized that Navalny was initially in the confined space of the aircraft.

If Navalny was poisoned by "Novijok", then other passengers may also be poisoned and injured.

Because "Novijok" is a highly toxic substance, small doses can also cause serious consequences.

  The Russian President’s Press Secretary Peskov said on the same day that Russia hopes to clarify the cause of the incident.

The Russian Procuratorate has issued relevant requests to Germany, but has not received a response so far.

  According to Russian Satellite News Agency, Belarusian President Lukashenko was quoted as saying that the Belarusian intelligence service intercepted calls between Poland and Germany.

Judging from the content of the call, Navari's poisoning is a fabricated fact.

  Navalny is a well-known Russian opposition figure.

On August 20, he suddenly fell into a coma on the way to Moscow, and then the plane made an emergency landing in Omsk.

Local doctors in Omsk stated that no trace of poison was found in Navalin.

Since then, Navalny was taken by a special plane to the Charité Medical School in Berlin, Germany for treatment.

On September 2, the German Federal Government stated that the German military laboratory found "clear evidence" of the "Novichok" nerve agent in Navarine after conducting a toxicology test.

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