Russian Agent’s killers may have harmed thousands trailing radioactive polonium-210 around London.
Alexander Litvinenko
LONDON — The killers of former
Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko may have harmed the health of thousands of
Londoners as they trailed radioactive polonium-210 around the city, a lawyer
for British police said Thursday.
Richard Horwell told an inquiry into
Litvinenko’s death that the killing — which police blame on two Russians
directed by elements in the Kremlin — may have exposed “hundreds if not
thousands of Londoners” to radioactive contamination.
“We will never know how dangerous the
exposure of polonium to the public at large will be and what long-term effects
will be visited on Londoners,” Horwell said.
Litvinenko, a KGB
officer-turned-Kremlin critic who fled to Britain in 2000, died in 2006, three
weeks after drinking tea laced with polonium-210 at a London hotel. On his
deathbed, Litvinenko accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of ordering his
assassination — a claim Moscow denies.
British authorities say there is
evidence of Russian state involvement, and police have accused two Russians who
met Litvinenko in London, Dmitry Kovtun and Andrei Lugovoi, of carrying out the
killing. Both deny involvement.
Horwell said the “the science is such
that the finger points unwaveringly” at Kovtun and Lugovoi.
“The Metropolitan Police Service want Lugovoi and Kovtun to be tried in this country for murder,” Horwell said.
“The Metropolitan Police Service want Lugovoi and Kovtun to be tried in this country for murder,” Horwell said.
But that seems a remote prospect.
Moscow refuses to extradite the suspects. Lugovoi is now a lawmaker in Russia,
and in March he was given a medal by Putin for services to the nation.
Horwell said that “no matter how many
state honours Putin may pin to Lugovoi’s chest for services to the motherland …
Lugovoi and Kovtun have no credible answer to the scientific evidence and to
the trail of polonium they left behind.”
Traces of the radioactive isotope,
which is deadly if ingested in tiny quantities, were found in sites across
London that the pair visited, including hotel rooms, restaurants, nightclubs
and the stadium of soccer team Arsenal.
Lawyers are making closing statements
at the months-long inquiry, which is due to end Friday. Judge Robert Owen, who
has heard from dozens of witnesses and seen secret evidence from the British
intelligence services, plans to release his conclusions by the end of the year.
Horwell said it was clear that “the
Russian state in one form or another is likely to have been the sponsor of this
plot.” Litvinenko had criticized his former employer, the FSB, successor to the
KGB, and accused Putin of being involved in criminal activities.
Litvinenko also co-authored a book
blaming the Russian government for involvement in a series of apartment
building explosions in 1999 that were blamed on Chechen rebels.
“The Russian state had reasons
aplenty for wishing Litvinenko not only harm, but death,” Horwell said.
The Kremlin has denied all Litvinenko’s accusations against the government and Putin.
The Kremlin has denied all Litvinenko’s accusations against the government and Putin.
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