russian critic vladimir kara-murza poisoning chance 2015 intv_00001430.jpg
Wife blames Kremlin for husband's grave condition
03:32 - Source: CNN

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Dissident vows to continue working for democracy

Kremlin denies connection to Kara-Murza's illness

Moscow CNN  — 

A critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who was hospitalized this month after suspected poisoning, has left the country to seek further treatment, the man’s lawyer said Sunday.

“This morning, Vladimir Kara-Murza flew abroad with his wife Evgenia Kara-Murza, accompanied by physician to undergo a rehabilitation course after repeated severe poisoning (a few days earlier he had been in a critical state of coma),” reads a Facebook statement posted by Kara-Murza’s lawyer, Vadim Prokhorov.

Kara-Murza was released from a Moscow hospital, said Prokhorov, who did not reveal his client’s destination.

“The diagnosis in the discharge summary is the same – ‘toxic effects of unknown substances,’” Prokhorov said.

The lawyer added that Kara-Murza plans to continue to pursue “the restoration of democracy in Russia.”

First coma was in 2015

Kara-Murza, who fell into a coma in 2015 after a suspected poisoning, was hospitalized February 3 after falling ill. He is part of Open Russia, an organization of anti-Putin activists who are calling for open elections, a free press and civil rights reforms.

His wife told CNN on February 9 that Kara-Murza had awakened from a medically induced coma. Evgenia Kara-Murza has blamed the Kremlin for her husband’s hospitalizations.

CNN cannot independently confirm her claims, and Russia has denied any connection to Kara-Murza’s illness.

Kara-Murza with his wife, Evgenia, and their three children.

Doctors in the hospital where Kara-Murza is being treated say they still “have no real idea” what caused his illness, but agree that it was triggered by a “toxic substance,” his lawyer Vadim Prokhorov told CNN. He said he has no direct proof his client was poisoned.

Kara-Murza, who lives with his wife and three children in Virginia part-time, was in Russia to promote a documentary on the assassination of his late friend, the former leading opposition figure Boris Nemtsov.

Nemtsov was shot to death on a bridge near the Kremlin as he walked home from a restaurant in February 2015. Kara-Murza became ill four months later.

US lawmakers urge investigation

Kara-Murza, left, and his late friend, Boris Nemtsov, visit Sen. John McCain in Washington in 2013.

Kara-Murza’s hospitalization has triggered an outcry from US lawmakers.

US Sen. Marco Rubio urged the White House and the State Department to question Russian authorities about the case.

“Vladimir Putin does not deserve any benefit of the doubt here, given how commonplace political assassinations and poisonings have become under his regime,” said Rubio, a frequent Putin critic. “I am praying that Kara-Murza’s condition improves.”

Eliza Mackintosh, Emma Burrows and Ivan Watson contributed to this report.