Minister’s death dismissed by the president is the latest episode of a series of deaths in suspicious circumstances. Remember striking episodes. The murder of Russian opposition Roman Starovoit, former Russian transport minister, fired by President Vladimir Putin, joined the long list of Russian authorities who, according to the government, would have taken their lives. The case happened on Monday (7) and reverberated around the world. ✅ Click here to follow the G1 international news channel on WhatsApp in recent years, the Russian press has reported a series of suicides involving Putin’s authorities, as well as opponents of the president and even Magnatas. The Russian government has also been accused of having commissioned deaths from critics and political opponents. Recent cases include the death of Yevgeny Prigozhin, a mercenary who led the Wagner group and was of great importance at the beginning of the war against Ukraine but broke with Putin shortly before he died in a plane crash. Another emblematic case was the death of opponent Alexei Navalny, who was arrested. The Russian government states that he died of natural causes. However, Navalny had already survived a poisoning in the past, and his family says the opponent was murdered. The Russian government denies involvement in opponent deaths and usually uses state press to report alleged suicides of authorities or personalities, stating that cases are being investigated. In this report, you will see in detail some cases: the death by shooting of Roman Starovoit, Putin’s minister to death by “natural causes” of Alexei Navalny, Putin’s opponent the plane crash that killed Yevgeny Prigozhin, former Putin ally, the poisoning of former spy Alexander Litvinenko, Putin’s critic of the crash of the hotel window PAVEL ANTOV, Russian Magnata who criticized warfare the hospital window of Ravil Maganov, president of oil to the wave of deaths of Russian millionaires 1. Roman Starovoit, dismissed minister Roman Starovoit in exactly one month, on May 7, 2025 Reuters/Maxim Shemetov/Roman file photo was found dead in the region Moscow hours after being fired from the position of Minister of Transport. His body was found in the midst of shrubs on Monday, according to local press. The Izlalating newspaper, citing an anonymous source, said Starovoit shot himself. Other Russian media said that a pistol belonging to him was found next to his body. Starovoit was appointed Minister of Transport in May 2024, after spending nearly five years as governor of the Kursk region on the Ukraine border. According to a source from the Reuters news agency, Starovoit’s position had been in question for months, not for specific transport reasons, but for corruption scandals in Kursk. A few months after Starovoit left the position of Governor of Kursk, Ukrainian troops crossed the border. 2. Alexei Navalny, Putin Opponent File photo show Alexei Navalny during protests on February 29, 2020 Pavel Golovkin/AP Alexi Navalny died in February 2024 in a Arctic Penal Colony. He was 47 years old and was one of Vladimir Putin’s main opponents. In a report, the Russian government stated that the politician died of natural causes. At the time, Russia’s penitentiary service said in a statement that Navalny felt bad during a walk and lost consciousness. According to Russian agency Tass, he was taken to the hospital, and rescuers tried to revive him for 30 minutes. Navalny was famous for making corruption charges against the Putin government. In 2010, he led a movement that took thousands of people to the streets. He became a presidential candidate, but was prevented from running for the elections. At least twice, in a two -year break, Navalny was the target of poisoning attempts. In one case, in 2020, the opponent was ill on a flight and was rushed to the ICU. It was later found that chemical agents had been implemented in his underwear. After death in prison in 2024, Navalny’s family accused the Russian government of murder. The European Union and the United States also held Russia responsible for death. Moscow denied the accusations. 3. Yevgeny Prigozhin, former Putin Yevgeny Prigozhin ally leads Wagner, a group used by Putin in the war in Ukraine Reuters Yevgeny Prigozhin died in August 2023 after the plane he was crashed near Moscow. He was head of the Wagner mercenaries group, who struggled alongside Russia in the war against Ukraine. Prigozhin was 62 years old and was Putin’s intimate friend until a few months before he died. The two broke after the Wagner group began a campaign to dismiss the Russian Defense Minister in June 2023. The crisis began when Prigozhin accused the Russian government of promoting an attack on camps in Ukraine. The head of the mercenary group promised to retaliate the bombing and started a march towards Moscow. In 24 hours, the Wagner group organized a rebellion, knocked down a Russian helicopter and took control of a city in the south of the country. Faced with the threat, security in Moscow was reinforced, and Putin classified the case as a “back stab.” The crisis ended after an agreement between the government and the mercenaries, mediated by Belarus. While the mercenaries abandoned the riot, Russia promised to withdraw criminal accusations and do not pursue any of the members of the movement. Two months later, Prigozhin died in the plane crash with nine others, including one of his main allies. US military heard from The New York Times said the fall was caused by an explosion, probably caused by an adulterated pump or fuel. The Russian government claims that the causes of the fall are being investigated. 4. Alexander Litvinenko, former Russian spy portrait of Alexander Litvinenko in November 1998, when he was part of the Russian security service FSB Vasily Djachkov/Reuters/Alexander Litvinenko file was killed in November 2006 in London. He was a former Russian secret service agent and was poisoned, according to the British authorities. Litvinenko was a spy of the KGB during the time of the Soviet Union and continued to work as an agent of the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) after collapse of the block. Putin took command of the agency in the 1990s, before becoming president. In 1998, he and other FSB agents accused the government of setting up a plot to kill the Boris Berezovsky oligarch, which was a Putin ex-alienate. Litvinenko was the target of a lawsuit and fled from Russia after being acquitted. The former Spião got asylum in the United Kingdom, where he moved to in the 2000s. In the following years, he served as an independent investigator and critic of the Russian government. In November 2006, it suddenly got sick. Before he died, he accused Putin of poisoning him. An investigation pointed out that Litvinenko was poisoned with Polonium-210, a radioactive material available only in nuclear facilities. The element would have been placed in a cup of tea served in a hotel. According to AFP, when he died, Litvinenko was working for the British espionage agency and helped fight the Russian mafia. In 2021, the European Human Rights Court considered Russia responsible for Litvinenko’s death and determined the payment of compensation. 5. PAVEL ANTOV, Russian millionaire Antov founded Vladimir Standard in the 2000s and became a renowned legislator in the city of Vladimir Pavel Antov/VK the tycoon Pavel Anto was found dead in a hotel in India in December 2022, weeks after criticizing the invasion of Ukraine by Russia. He worked as a regional deputy and was a businessman in the sausage business. Antov was from the same political party as Putin and even held a position in a government agriculture committee. In July 2022, after the war began, he used a social network to classify Russian missile attacks on Kiev as “terrorism.” The millionaire even apologized, stating that he was “a supporter of the president and patriot”, as well as “sharing the objectives” of the invasion. Months later, he traveled to India to celebrate his 66th birthday. According to Russian media, he fell from a window. Two days earlier, a friend accompanying him was also found dead, surrounded by bottles of wine. One policeman said in an interview that the suspicion is that he killed himself after being depressed by his friend’s death. 6. Ravil Maganov, president of oil, Russian President Vladimir Putin grants Alexander Nevsky’s order to Ravil Maganov, executive of the Russian oil company Lukoil, on November 25, 2019 Lukoil/Ravil Maganov was 67 years old and died in September 2022, after falling from the window of a hospital in Moscow. He was president of the Russian oil company Lukoil. After the war began, the company that Maganov commanded issued a grade of condolence to the victims of the bombing and asked for the end of the conflict in Ukraine as soon as possible. The businessman’s death had different versions in Russia. Lukoil issued a note stating that Maganov died as a result of a “severe disease,” while state media reported that he had taken his own life. The entrepreneur had worked in the oil company since 1993. He supervised the areas of oil refining, production and exploitation. In 2019, he received from Putin an honor. The following year, he became president of Lukoil. 7. Wave of tycoon deaths in the G1 videos since the beginning of the invasion of Ukraine, a series of riots and Russian executives have died in suspicious circumstances. In several cases, local press has pointed to suicides, windows or violent deaths involving family members. Many of these entrepreneurs or leaders had connections with strategic sectors such as oil, gas or banks, and some even openly criticized the war. See some of these cases: Leonid Schulman, director of Gazprom: was found dead in the bathroom of his residence in St. Petersburg. There was a letter that indicated the suicide version. Alexander Tyulyakov, deputy director of Gazprom: was found hanged in a cottage also in the São Petersburg region. Andrei Krukovsky, director of Gazprom’s resort: he was 37 and died after falling from a cliff outside Sochi, southern Russia. Mikhail Watford, Petroleum Magnata: It was found hanged in the garage of his mansion in the London suburb. Sergei Protosenya, a former Novatek executive: was found dead next to his wife and daughter in a village in Spain in April. Vasily Melnikov, former employee of the medical equipment company Medstom: was found dead in his apartment in the district of Volga, along with his wife and two children aged 4 and 10. Vladislav Avaev, former Gazprombunk president: The tycoon and his family were found dead in Moscow. Kristina Baikova, vice president of Loko-Bank bank: died after falling from the 11th floor of a building. Videos: More Assisted from G1
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Fall of the window, poisoning and plane crash: the suspected deaths of tycoons, opponents and former Putin charges in Russia
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