Audio By Carbonatix
If Navalny survives, a Kremlin-linked businessman intends 'to strip' him and his allies 'of their clothes and shoes'.
Kremlin-linked businessman Yevgeny Prigozhin has promised to ruin Russian opposition politician Alexey Navalny, who is in a coma in a Berlin hospital, with a court-ordered penalty of about $1.2m.
Prigozhin is nicknamed "Putin's chef" because his company Konkord has done catering for the Kremlin.
Media reports have said he funds the Wagner Group, a semi-private Russian military contractor, claims he denies.
Navalny, a 44-year-old lawyer and anti-corruption campaigner who is one of Putin's fiercest opponents, is being treated at Berlin's Charite hospital after falling ill on a flight from Siberia to Moscow.
Tests by German medics indicated poisoning by cholinesterase inhibitors, which are found in nerve agents.
The penalty
A court in October last year ordered that Navalny, his associate Lyubov Sobol and the Anti-Corruption Foundation he founded must jointly pay almost 88 million rubles ($1.2m) to the Moskovsky Shkolnik (Moscow schoolboy) company, which makes school dinners.
The company has been linked to Prigozhin in media reports. He denies owning it.
On Tuesday evening, Konkord's press service said in a social media statement that Prigozhin bought the debt so that Navalny and his associates would owe him directly.
"I intend to strip this group of unscrupulous people of their clothes and shoes," Prigozhin was quoted as saying after paying off the company directly named in the court case, meaning the payment would go to him directly.
Prigozhin said "if comrade Navalny kicks the bucket, I personally don't intend to persecute him in this world.
"I'll put this off for an indefinite time and then I'll compensate myself to my pleasure."
If Navalny survives, Prigozhin said he would be liable "according to the full severity of Russian law".
A video investigation
The case concerned a video investigation by the Foundation that accused the company of monopolising the market and alleged its food was bad quality and made children ill.
Navalny in July formally closed the Foundation in a move to avoid paying its share of the court-ordered penalty.
Its director Ivan Zhdanov in a message to supporters on Wednesday suggested that Navalny could have been poisoned over one of the Foundation's investigations.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana Airways restoration key to national pride and economic reset – Ablakwa Â
28 minutes -
US seizes second oil tanker off Venezuela’s coast
36 minutes -
Australian PM announces intelligence review as country mourns Bondi attack
47 minutes -
Imran Khan and wife given further jail terms after state gift fraud case
47 minutes -
5 perish in fatal collision on Cape Coast–Takoradi Highway
59 minutes -
Poultry imports driving egg glut – GAPFA
2 hours -
Legal lifeline for Ghanaians in America as lawyers association, Embassy move to tackle diaspora challenges
2 hours -
Photos: First Atlantic Bank PLC officially listed on Ghana Stock Exchange
3 hours -
Energy minister assures stable power as Ghana hits peak demand in December
3 hours -
Miguel Ribeiro Fiifi Brandful
4 hours -
Adom TV’s ‘Nine Lessons and Carols’ electrifies National Theatre in a festive extravaganza
4 hours -
Mahama orders $78m payment to Justmoh to resume Agona–Nkwanta road works
4 hours -
Christmas rush deepens traffic woes in Accra Central
4 hours -
Three arrested after viral video shows toddler being fed alcohol
4 hours -
Survivors ‘nervous and sceptical’ about release of remaining Epstein files
5 hours
