
Mysterious deaths and sudden illnesses of people in power, connected to the Kremlin, are not rare, especially since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine...
The close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin appears to have health problems. The Ukrainian secret service reports that Chechen leader Ramazan Kadyrov is in a coma.
The representative of the Main Directorate of Intelligence of the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine, Andriy Yusov, has stated that the Chechen leader's illness, from which he suffered for a long time, has worsened.
As early as March 2023, Chechnya's former deputy prime minister, Akhmad Zakayev, who now lives in exile, said that Kadyrov had a serious kidney ailment - and had brought a doctor from the United Arab Emirates to Chechnya because he did not trusted Moscow doctors.
This leaves one to suspect that Putin's action to "disappear" the people he sees as a danger to his power, has started to come to life since the uprising of the "Wagner" group, and this was noticed with the execution of Prigozhin.
Kadyrov's illness may be one of the reasons for falling into a coma, but according to suspicions, "a hand" may have been given to him by Vladimir Putin.
Mysterious deaths and sudden illnesses of people in power, related to the Kremlin, are not rare, especially since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
At least 13 high-profile Russian businessmen are said to have died by suicide or in unexplained accidents last year, with six of them linked to Russia's two biggest energy companies.
Russian sausage tycoon turned lawmaker Pavel Antov died in India in December after falling from the third floor of his hotel, according to Indian police.
Antov's death came after his friend and traveling companion Vladimir Budanov died of a heart attack on Antov's 65th birthday two days earlier, according to police. Budanov was 61 and had a pre-existing heart condition, police said, adding that they believed Antov's death was a suicide.
Alexander Buzakov, head of a major Russian shipyard that specializes in building non-nuclear submarines, died suddenly in December, with no cause of death given by authorities.
Anatoly Gerashchenko, the former rector of the Moscow Aviation Institute, died in an unspecified accident in September, according to a statement from the institute. Lukoil chairman Ravil Maganov died in early September after falling from a hospital window in Moscow, according to TASS.
In mid-September, Russian businessman Ivan Pechorin, who was the chief manager of the Far East and Arctic Development Corporation, was found dead in Vladivostok, according to Russian state media. According to regional media Pechorin sank on September 10 near Cape Ignatyev in Vladivostok.
Another senior Lukoil manager, Alexander Subbotin, was found dead near Moscow in May in what police called a suicide.
Since the start of the war in Ukraine, in one way or another, Putin has tried to silence the opposing voices. According to what many analysts and people close to the Kremlin claim, the mysterious deaths are suspected to be an inside job of the Kremlin, ordered by Putin to silence voices in his inner circle that could endanger his power./ Pamphlet
Lini një Përgjigje