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=== Poisoning of Emilian Gebrev === In the aftermath of the Skripal poisoning, investigative journalists were able to track some of the people involved also in Bulgaria. This is how another suspected poisoning case dating back to April 2015 during their stay in the country was linked to the Novichok nerve agent. The victim was the Bulgarian arms dealer Emilian Gebrev, who shared two hypotheses why he might have been attacked: The first one links to the fact that his arms manufacturing company Dunarit exports defense equipment to Ukraine. The other one relates to an attempt by an offshore company to take over Dunarit. The takeover attempt was ultimately linked to the influential Bulgarian politician and oligarch Delyan Peevski who has historically been funded by Russia's state-owned VTB Bank. In November 2023 Bulgaria sought the extradition of three Russian GRU officers, Sergey Fedotov, Georgi Gorshkov and Sergey Pavlov, suspected of the poisoning incident. Sergei Fedotov was also the alias used by one of the assassins in the Salisbury poisonings.

=== Poisoning of Alexei Navalny ===

On 20 August 2020, Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny fell ill during a flight from Tomsk to Moscow. The plane made an emergency landing in Omsk, where Navalny was hospitalized and put in a medically induced coma. His family suspected his illness was caused by a poison put into a cup of tea he drank before the flight. He was evacuated to the Charité hospital in Berlin, Germany, the following day. On 2 September, the German government said that it had "unequivocal evidence" that Navalny was poisoned by a Novichok agent after tests at a German military lab and had called on the Russian government for an explanation, with labs in France and Sweden corroborating the findings. On 4 September, the North Atlantic Council was briefed by the German representative on the "appalling assassination attempt on" Navalny. In a post-meeting press conference, Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said that NATO allies "agree that Russia has serious questions it must answer", that the OPCW needed to conduct an impartial investigation, that "those responsible for this attack must be brought to justice" and called on Russia to "provide complete disclosure of the Novichok programme to the OPCW." Navalny had been out of his coma since 7 September. On 6 October, the OPCW confirmed the presence of a cholinesterase inhibitor from the Novichok group in Navalny's blood and urine samples. At the same time, the OPCW report clarified that Navalny was poisoned with a new type of Novichok, which was not included in the list of controlled chemicals of the Chemical Weapons Convention.

== See also == Poison laboratory of the Soviet secret services Russia and weapons of mass destruction

=== List of Novichok agents === A-230 A-232 A-234 A-242 A-262 (Novichok-7) C01-A035 C01-A039 C01-A042

== References ==

=== Explanatory notes ===

=== Citations ===

=== General and cited references ===

== Further reading == Kincaid C (February 1995), "Russia's Dirty Chemical Secret", American Legion Magazine, vol. 138, no. 2, American Legion, pp. 3234, 58

== External links ==

Fedorov L (27 July 1994). "Chemical Weapons in Russia: History, Ecology, Politics". Federation of American Scientists. Archived from the original on 8 December 2000. Russian chemical weapons at GlobalSecurity.org