From the BBC:
“Russia behind Litvinenko
murder, rules European rights court”
Russia was responsible for the
killing of Alexander Litvinenko, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) has
found. Litvinenko, a former Russian spy who became a British citizen, was
fatally poisoned with radioactive polonium-210 in London in 2006. A UK public
inquiry conducted 10 years later concluded that the killing was "probably
approved" by Russian President Vladimir Putin. Russia has always denied
any involvement in his murder.
The UK inquiry said former KGB
bodyguard Andrei Lugovoi and another Russian, Dmitry Kovtun deliberately
poisoned Mr Litvinenko, probably by putting the radioactive substance into his
tea. Litvinenko's widow, Marina, took the case against Russia to the
Strasbourg-based rights court, which has agreed with the UK inquiry's conclusion.
"The court found in particular that there was a strong prima facie case
that, in poisoning Mr Litvinenko, Mr Lugovoi and Mr Kovtun had been acting as
agents of the Russian state," the ECHR ruled. It concluded that Russia's
failure to refute claims that it had organised the killing further pointed
towards the state's responsibility. Both Mr Lugovoi and Mr Kovtun have denied
any involvement in the killing. A year afterwards, Mr Lugovoi became a member
of Russia's lower house of parliament for a right-wing nationalist party. He
later condemned the UK public inquiry as a spectacle and an open lie.
However, the Strasbourg rights
court found it had established "beyond reasonable doubt" that the
pair had carried out the poisoning, from the complex procurement of "rare,
deadly poison", to the travel arrangements and the repeated and sustained
attempts to poison Litvinenko. Litvinenko had fled Russia, where he had been an
officer with the FSB security service. He became a fierce critic of President
Vladimir Putin and was in the pay of the UK's MI6 secret service, reportedly
investigating Russian mafia links with Spain. He met Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitry
Kovtun for a cup of tea at a central London hotel on 1 November 2006. He soon
fell ill and was admitted to hospital shortly afterwards. His condition
worsened and he died on 23 November.
The ECHR found that if his murder
had been a "rogue operation" then Russia would have been able to
prove that. But the court said no serious attempt was made to disprove the
findings of the UK authorities. Although it said Russia should pay Litvinenko's
widow €122,500 (£105,000; $144,000) in costs and other damages, it rejected her
claim for punitive damages.
Analysis box by Frank Gardner,
security correspondent The poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko broke a number
of unwritten rules and taboos. It was an unprecedented use of a
radiological weapon - polonium-210 - on British soil, with the perpetrators
leaving a trail of forensic clues wherever they went. The assassination,
again on British soil, of someone who had been helpful to MI6, the Secret
Intelligence Service, was also highly unusual. But the cause of his death very
nearly went undiscovered. Polonium-210 is a rare material, produced in a
reactor that emits alpha rays, not gamma rays. These are too weak to penetrate
the skin but if ingested they are lethal, breaking down the cell walls, causing
multiple organ failure. In Litvinenko's case it was only discovered, too
late, in his urine and the precise source identified by nuclear scientists from
the Atomic Weapons Establishment at Aldermaston in Berkshire. The ECHR's
ruling that Russia was behind this murder will come as no surprise to those who
have already investigated it.
^ This is a good verdict, but I
don’t see the Russian Government ever paying any money for carrying out this
murder. ^
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