<p>Doctors at the Berlin hospital who have been treating Alexei Navalny, the prominent Russian dissident who fell ill while on a flight to Moscow last week, said in a statement Monday that tests had revealed indications of poisoning but that his life was not in danger.</p>.<p>“The clinical findings indicate intoxication by a substance from the group of cholinesterase inhibitors,” the doctors at Charité hospital said in a statement. “The specific substance has not been identified so far, and a further wide-ranging analysis has been initiated.”</p>.<p>The effect of the toxin “has been proven several times and in independent laboratories,” the statement said.</p>.<p>Navalny remained in an induced coma in stable condition, but his life was not in danger, according to the statement.</p>
<p>Doctors at the Berlin hospital who have been treating Alexei Navalny, the prominent Russian dissident who fell ill while on a flight to Moscow last week, said in a statement Monday that tests had revealed indications of poisoning but that his life was not in danger.</p>.<p>“The clinical findings indicate intoxication by a substance from the group of cholinesterase inhibitors,” the doctors at Charité hospital said in a statement. “The specific substance has not been identified so far, and a further wide-ranging analysis has been initiated.”</p>.<p>The effect of the toxin “has been proven several times and in independent laboratories,” the statement said.</p>.<p>Navalny remained in an induced coma in stable condition, but his life was not in danger, according to the statement.</p>