“Kucherenko was feeling ill while on a plane with a Russian delegation that was returning from a business trip to Cuba. The plane landed in the city of Mineralnye Vody, where doctors tried to assist,” the ministry said in a statement posted on its website, adding that the minister could not be saved.
Kucherenko’s family said his death may have been from a heart condition, but a forensic examination will be held on Wednesday, according to the state-run broadcaster Zvezda.
Speaking to reporters on Tuesday, Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said he was not aware of Kucherenko’s cause of death.
Journalist Roman Super, who fled Russia shortly after it invaded Ukraine last February, said on his Telegram channel that he had spoken with Kucherenko “just days” before fleeing.
He said Kucherenko feared for his safety and encouraged him to leave Russia.
“Save yourself and your family. Leave as soon as possible. You cannot imagine the degree of brutalisation of our state. In a year you won’t recognise Russia at all. By leaving you are doing the right thing,” Super quoted Kucherenko as saying.
Super said he asked Kucherenko if he too wanted to leave Russia, to which he said the minister replied: “It is no longer possible to do so. They take away our passports. And there is no such world where they will now be happy with the deputy Russian minister after this fascist invasion.”
The journalist added that Kucherenko told him he’d been taking anti-depressants and tranquilisers, quoting him as saying: “I drink them in handfuls. And it doesn’t help much. I hardly sleep. I feel terrible. We are all taken hostage. Nobody can say anything. Otherwise, we are immediately crushed like bugs.”
It has been reported that senior Russian officials at the Kremlin and in the regions have been forbidden from leaving their posts.
IStories, an online investigative news outlet based outside Russia and run by a well-known journalist Roman Anin, reported last week that several governors, officials within the security forces and people from the presidential administration had tried to quit but had not been allowed to.
Peskov dismissed the report as a hoax.
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Mysterious deaths pile up
Kucherenko’s demise is not the first unexplained Russian death to spark interest.
At least 13 high-profile Russian businessmen have reportedly died by suicide or in unexplained accidents in the last year, with six of them associated with Russia’s two largest energy companies.
Antov’s death came after his friend and travel companion Vladimir Budanov died of a heart attack on Antov’s 65th birthday, two days earlier, according to the police.
Budanov was 61 years old and had a preexisting heart condition, the police said, adding that they believed Antov’s death was a suicide.
Alexander Buzakov, the head of a major Russian shipyard that specialises in building non-nuclear submarines, died suddenly in December, with no cause of death given by the authorities, Reuters news agency reported.
Anatoly Gerashchenko, the former rector to the Moscow Aviation Institute, died in an unspecified accident in September, according to a statement from the institute.
Lukoil chairman Ravil Maganov died at the beginning of September after falling out of the window of a hospital in Moscow, according to TASS.
Pechorin drowned on September 10 near Cape Ignatyev in Vladivostok, regional media reported.
Another top Lukoil manager, Alexander Subbotin, was found dead near Moscow in May after reportedly visiting a shaman, TASS reported.
Thriving city turned into smouldering ruins