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Navalny's Doctor: Putin Critic 'Could Die at Any Moment'

Associated Press

   MOSCOW - A doctor for imprisoned Russian opposition leader Alexey
   Navalny, who is in the third week of a hunger strike, says his health
   is deteriorating rapidly and the 44-year-old Kremlin critic could be on
   the verge of death.

   Physician Yaroslav Ashikhmin said Saturday that test results he
   received from Navalny's family showed him with sharply elevated levels
   of potassium, which can bring on cardiac arrest, and heightened
   creatinine levels that indicate impaired kidneys.

   "Our patient could die at any moment," he said in a Facebook post.

   Anastasia Vasilyeva, head of the Navalny-backed Alliance of Doctors
   union, said on Twitter that "action must be taken immediately."

   Navalny is Russian President Vladimir Putin's most visible and adamant
   opponent.

   His personal physicians have not been allowed to see him in prison. He
   went on a hunger strike to protest the refusal to let them visit when
   he began experiencing severe back pain and a loss of feeling in his
   legs. Russia's state penitentiary service has said that Navalny is
   receiving all the medical help he needs.

   Navalny was arrested on January 17 when he returned to Russia from
   Germany, where had spent five months recovering from Soviet nerve-agent
   poisoning that he blamed on the Kremlin. Russian officials denied any
   involvement and even questioned whether Navalny had been poisoned,
   though it was confirmed by several European laboratories.

   He was ordered to serve 2½ years in prison on the ground that his long
   recovery in Germany violated a suspended sentence he had been given for
   a fraud conviction. Navalny said that case was politically motivated.