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View Full Version : Russia will not hand over radioactive polonium spy killer


warrior1972
05-22-2007, 02:54 PM
By Mark Trevelyan
1 hour, 17 minutes ago



LONDON (Reuters) - British prosecutors accused an ex-KGB agent on Tuesday of poisoning Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko with radioactive polonium and demanded his extradition, setting London and Moscow on a diplomatic collision course.

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The Crown Prosecution Service said it wanted to bring suspect Andrei Lugovoy before a British court and charge him with the "extraordinarily grave crime" of murdering exiled Russian Litvinenko in London last November.

Britain's Foreign Office summoned the Russian ambassador and told him in strong terms it expected "full cooperation" over Lugovoy's case, but Russia's Prosecutor-General office said the constitution prevented it from extraditing Russian citizens.

"No one should be under any doubt about the seriousness with which we regard this case. Murder is murder," Prime Minister Tony Blair's spokesman said.

Lugovoy denied the accusation and told Itar-Tass news agency: "I consider this decision politically motivated."

"I did not kill Litvinenko, have nothing to do with his death and can prove with facts my distrust of the so-called evidence collected by Britain's justice system."

In an interview with Britain's Channel Four news, Lugovoy said: "I am absolutely calm and I am absolutely innocent."

The murkiest case of murder and espionage since the Cold War had already strained diplomatic relations and the extradition move looked certain to aggravate tensions.

Blair's spokesman stressed Britain had important political and economic ties with Russia. "This doesn't in any way obviate the need for the international rule of law to be respected, and we will not in any way shy away from trying to ensure that happens in a case such as this," he said.

Russian prosecutors said they would give their full attention to any charges against Lugovoy once they had received official documents from Britain, and raised the possibility he could be tried in his homeland.

Ties between Russia and the European Union are frosty on a range of issues from missile defense to human rights. European energy producers rely on huge oil and gas imports from Russia.

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Litvinenko, a former KGB agent who had become a fierce critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin in exile, met Lugovoy and another Russian businessman, Dmitry Kovtun, at the Pine Bar of London's Millennium Hotel on November 1 last year.

Within hours, he had fallen severely ill. He suffered an agonizing death over the next three weeks as his organs gradually failed. Images of his emaciated body, hooked up to medical tubes, were published around the world.

Doctors eventually diagnosed poisoning by polonium 210, a highly toxic radioactive isotope.

In a letter dictated on his deathbed, Litvinenko, who had acquired British citizenship weeks before he was poisoned, accused Putin of his murder.

Moscow dismissed the accusation as ridiculous. It has launched its own investigation into Litvinenko's death and denies that its security services played any part.

Lugovoy, a former KGB bodyguard who later worked as head of security for tycoon Boris Berezovsky, has accused British media of demonizing him.

A Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) spokeswoman said it would ask the police to send an arrest warrant to the Russian authorities. "The ball is now in the Russians' court," she said.

Litvinenko's widow Marina said she had told the Russian ambassador at a meeting on Tuesday that the best way to restore Russia's reputation was to extradite Lugovoy.

"It is important to me that my husband didn't die in vain and that the perpetrators of his murder are brought to justice in the UK," she said in a statement. "I will not rest until I know that justice has been done."

She has filed an initial complaint against Moscow with the European Court of Human Rights. Her lawyer Louise Christian said the complaint related to potential Russian breaches of five articles of the European Convention on Human Rights.

(Additional reporting by Katherine Baldwin, David Clarke, Adrian Croft, Peter Graff and Kate Kelland in London; James Kilner and Guy Faulconbridge in Moscow)

Dzerod
05-23-2007, 06:29 AM
For sure he won't be extradited as long as Berezovskiy has a refugee status.
PS. Litvinenko was not an agent, he was an officer of KGB.