A
Russian former intelligence officer, who is accused by the British
government of having killed a former KGB spy in London, has agreed to
testify at a public inquiry to be held in the British capital next
month. British government prosecutors believe Russian businessman Dmitri
Kovtun, who worked for the KGB during the Cold War, poisoned his former
colleague in the KGB, Alexander Litvinenko, in 2006. Litvinenko was an
officer in the Soviet KGB and one of its successor organizations, the
FSB, until 2000, when he defected with his family to the United Kingdom.
He soon became known as a vocal critic of the administration of Russian
President Vladimir Putin. In 2006, Litvinenko came down with
radioactive poisoning soon after meeting Kovtun and another former KGB
officer, Andrey Lugovoy, at a London restaurant. He was dead less than
two weeks later.
In July of 2007, after establishing the cause of Litvinenko’s death,
which is attributed to the highly radioactive substance Polonium-210,
the British government officially charged
Kovtun and Lugovoy with murder and issued international arrest warrants
for their arrest. Soon afterwards, Whitehall announced the expulsion of
four Russian diplomats from London. The episode, which was the first
public expulsion of Russian envoys from Britain since end of the Cold
War, is often cited as marking the beginning of the worsening of
relations between the West and post-Soviet Russia.
Since 2007, when they were officially charged with murder, Kovtun and
Lugovoy deny the British government’s accusations, and claim that
Litvinenko poisoned himself by accident while trading in illegal nuclear
substances. The administration of Russian President Vladimir Putin
refuses to extradite the two former KGB officers to London, and has
denounced the British public inquiry into Litvinenko’s death as “a
sham”. However, last March Kovtun unexpectedly wrote to the presiding
judge at the inquiry, Sir Robert Owen, offering to testify via a live
video link from Moscow. On Monday, Sir Robert issued a statement
saying an agreement had been struck between Kovtun and the inquiry, and
that the Russian businessman would testify from Moscow, “most likely
towards the end of next month”. Kovtun is expected to confirm that he
met Litvinenko in London on the day the former KGB spy fell ill, but to
insist that he had no role in poisoning him.
http://intelnews.org/2015/06/16/01-1715/
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