Jailed Ukrainian opposition leader Yulia Tymoshenko accused President Viktor Yanuk-ovich of using Stalinist methods against her after prison officials confiscated devices that she said revealed high radiation levels in her hospital quarters.

The former Prime Minister accusedYanukovich, her political foe, of being behind the unusually high dosages of radiation in her hospital ward.

“Only he is capable now of taking special measures against my health and my life,” she said.

Tymoshenko made her allegations in a statement on her party’s website after prison officials carried out a search of her hospital room in the city of Kharkiv, where she is confined with back trouble, and took away some of her possessions.

“Today a search worthy of the best traditions of 1937 was carried out in my ward,” Tymoshenko said, referring to the purges of Soviet dictator Josef Stalin.

The 51-year-old politician is serving a seven-year sentence in Kharkiv on an abuse-of-office charge linked to a gas deal she brokered with Russia in 2009 when she was Prime Minister.

Prolonged hospital treatment has prevented a second trial for alleged embezzlement and tax evasion going ahead.

She denies all charges against her and says she is the victim of political revenge by Yanukovich who narrowly beat her for the presidency in February 2010.

Tymoshenko said the devices had been given to her to measure radiation levels and on four occasions they had shown that acceptable levels were exceeded.

She did not say who had given her the devices.

“I had planned to pass these devices soon to my defence counsel for this information to be made public,” she said.

“I am convinced this search was organised on the direct orders of Yanukovich aimed at confiscating the devices.”

Ukraine’s prison service confirmed officials had searched her hospital quarters on Thursday and confiscated “technical devices” and medicine of unknown origin which they found hidden.

“These objects and medicine have been handed over for examination,” the prison service said in a statement.

A Ukrainian high court last month rejected her appeal against the abuse-of-office conviction and Tymoshenko’s lawyers now plan to challenge it in the European Court for Human Rights.

Tymoshenko would have been a major political adversary of Yanukovich in an October 28 parliamentary election in which his Party of the Regions is fighting to hold on to its majority. The EU has supported Tymoshenko, calling her case an example of selective justice and shelving agreements on free trade and political association with Ukraine over the issue.

Tymoshenko led the 2004 Orange Revolution protests that doomed Yanukovich’s first bid for the presidency and went on to serve twice as Prime Minister.

Yanukovich has refused to intervene in Tymoshenko’s case despite being urged to do so by the West.

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