Bellingcat can confirm that three members of the delegation attending the peace talks between Ukraine and Russia on the night of 3 to 4 March 2022 experienced symptoms consistent with poisoning with chemical weapons. One of victims was Russian entrepreneur Roman Abramovich.
Abramovich, along with another Russian entrepreneur, had taken part in the negotiations alongside Ukraine’s MP Rustem Umerov. The negotiation round on the afternoon of 3 March took place on Ukrainian territory, and lasted until about 10 pm.
Three members of the negotiating team retreated to an apartment in Kyiv later that night and felt initial symptoms - including eye and skin inflammation and piercing pain in the eyes - later that night. The symptoms did not abate until the morning.
The next day the group of negotiators drove from Kyiv to Lviv on the way to Poland and then Istanbul, to continue informal negotiations with the Russian side. A Bellingcat investigator was asked to help provide an examination by chemical weapons specialists.
Based on remote and on-site examinations, the experts concluded that the symptoms are most likely the result of international poisoning with an undefined chemical weapon.
An alternative less likely hypothesis was use of microwave irradiation. The symptoms gradually subsided in the course of the following week.
The three men experiencing the symptoms consumed only chocolate and water in the hours before the symptoms appeared. A fourth member of the team who also consumed these did not experience symptoms.
That's intentional poisoning, not international.
According to two consulted CW experts and a doctor, the symptoms were most consistent with variants of porphyrin, organophosphates, or bicyclic substances. A definitive determination was not possible due to the absence of specialized laboratory equipment near the victims.
The experts said the dosage and type of toxin used was likely insufficient to cause life-threatening damage, and most likely was intended to scare the victims as opposed to cause permanent damage. The victims said they were not aware of who might have had an interest in an attack
Bellingcat chose not to report this story earlier due to concern about the safety of the victims. Given the choice of the targeted individuals to speak up, Bellingcat and its investigative partner @the_ins_ru intend to publish an investigation into the presumed poisonings.
An investigation by Bellingcat, @the_ins_ru and #BBCEyeInvestigations has found that in the months before he was shot dead, Russian politician Boris Nemtsov was followed by members of the same FSB squad that tailed @navalny and other opposition figures bellingcat.com/news/2022/03/2…
@the_ins_ru@navalny Nemtsov was once the man many thought would succeed Boris Yeltsin before Vladimir Putin was appointed acting president of Russia in December 1999.
@the_ins_ru@navalny Nemtsov was shot dead in Moscow in February 2015. Zaur Dadayev, a former Chechen security officer, was convicted of the murder by a Russian military court. nbcnews.com/news/world/bor…
Following the launch of our TimeMap platform that will document civilian harm in Ukraine, we'll be hosting a Twitter Space today (Friday) at 4pm CET to discuss our research process and new Global Authentication Project.
Send us your questions in the comments to this thread!
Bellingcat has been logging incidents that appear to depict civilian impact or harm since the beginning of the conflict in Ukraine.
We have now visualised this data in a TimeMap feature that allows users to explore what we have found 👇 bellingcat.com/news/2022/03/1…
You can go direct to the TimeMap here (although please note it is not yet compatible with mobile devices): ukraine.bellingcat.com
The aim of this project is to detail incidents where there is open source evidence of potential civilian harm, as well as attempting to clarify where such incidents have taken place and when.
Meet the Male State — again. The online gang of far-right Russian misogynists we investigated last year has become one of the most vocal and vile boosters of Putin’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. @ColborneMichael’s latest @BcatMonitoringbellingcat.com/news/rest-of-w…
Male State was banned as ‘extremist’ by a Russian court in October 2021. That hasn’t stopped their online network of channels from propagandising and posting on @telegram under their new ‘Male Legion’ name — they’ve even gained more followers since the ban bellingcat.com/news/uk-and-eu…
But as Russia invaded Ukraine in February, Male State and its founder Vladislav Pozdnyakov — who lives not in Russia, but apparently in Montenegro — went into overdrive defending Putin’s invasion and denigrating Ukrainians with hate speech and propaganda.
Bellingcat has continued to work with our partners and the online open source community to collect evidence of cluster munition use in Ukraine. Our latest investigation documents the types of cluster munitions already seen in the conflict: bellingcat.com/news/rest-of-w…
As previously documented by Bellingcat and partners, from the earliest days of the conflict the widespread use of cluster munitions in civilian areas has been documented, and Bellingcat continues to track their use. bellingcat.com/news/2022/02/2…
The most common type of cluster munition used so far is the Smerch 9M55K and Uragan 9M27K cluster rockets with 9N210 or 9N235 submunitions. They have been widely used across Ukraine, including extensively in the city of Kharkiv facebook.com/watch/?extid=C…
We're looking for the exact geolocation of this video, showing the remains of a RBK-500 cluster bomb and PTAB-1M submunitions. It was filmed in Zatoka, Odessa.
This article has an image of a street which appears to be linked to the same attack ukrinform.es/rubric-ato/341…
If anyone has seen other images of RBK-500 cluster munitions then please share them here. So far we've only identified one incident of their use.