Former Syrian president Bashar Assad ‘is hospitalised by poisoning assassination attempt’, respected rights group says

Reports have emerged of an attempted assassination of ex-Syrian president Bashar al-Assad in Moscow.
The former dictator was granted political asylum in Russia after he was deposed ten months ago.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights claimed citing a ‘private source’ that Assad was released from hospital on the outskirts of Moscow on Monday.
The source claimed that Assad ‘had been poisoned’ and that the motive behind the assassination operation was ‘to embarrass the Russian government and accuse it of being complicit’ in his death.
The report said Assad’s condition was now ‘stable’.
Only his brother Maher Assad was allowed to visit him in hospital amid a major security operation, it was claimed.
The Russian government has not to date commented on the claims.
Unconfirmed reports earlier suggested he was admitted to hospital in a ‘critical condition following poisoning’.
Reports have emerged of an attempted assassination of ex-Syrian president Bashar al-Assad in Moscow
The new authorities in Syria have demanded Assad’s extradition which Russia has until now refused.
Putin personally granted asylum to Assad along with members of his families and regime associates.
Assad, 60, has not been seen in public since arriving in Russia and is assumed to be kept under close guard by Russian secret services.
There is so far no independent evidence of Assad’s poisoning.
An earlier report after Assad had been in Russia less than one month said that he ‘complained to his security about feeling unwell and having trouble breathing’.
However, this account was not confirmed.
The U.S. state department estimates that the former dictator’s family is worth $2billion, with their wealth concealed in numerous accounts, shell companies, offshore tax havens and real estate portfolios.
He, his British wife and their three adult children left behind their Syrian palaces and began a new life in Moscow when Putin granted them asylum in December.
They likely drew on their family connections and extensive assets in Russia to keep up their comfortable lifestyle in exile.
The autocratic dynasty is thought to have bought up at least 20 Moscow apartments worth more than £30 million in recent years, illustrating Russia’s status as a safe haven for the clan.
Asma al-Assad, the London-born doctor’s daughter who has been battling an aggressive form of leukaemia, is widely believed to have arrived in Moscow with her daughter and two sons days before her husband finally fled Syria.
Secret tunnels beneath an Assad family mansion were reportedly uncovered after rebels seized the capital Damascus, with the network serving as a possible escape route for the dictator and his allies.
Meanwhile reports suggested that al-Assad could have fled via Russia’s Khmeimim airbase, with flight trackers reportedly showing a Russian plane taking off from near the north-eastern city of Latakia just hours before he was reported to be in Moscow.
This is a breaking news story. More to follow.