Spy Litvinenko Poisoned 'Not Once But Twice'

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 27 Januari 2015 | 20.48

Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko may have been poisoned with radioactive polonium twice, a public inquiry has heard.

Counsel to the inquiry Robin Tam QC said scientific evidence suggests a partially successful attempt to kill Mr Litvinenko was made at a meeting two weeks earlier than the encounter widely-believed to have caused his death.

Mr Tam also told the inquiry traces of radioactive chemical polonium were found in "large numbers of places across London" at the time of Mr Litvinenko's death.

"Many thousands of members of the public, including British residents and visitors from overseas, might have been at risk from radioactivity," he said.

Sir Robert Owen opened a hearing into the British citizen's death by recounting some of the key events he will consider - saying they raised issues of the "utmost gravity," including state-sponsored assassination.

Mr Litvinenko, 43, died in hospital nearly three weeks after drinking tea laced with radioactive polonium-210 while meeting two Russian men - one a former KGB officer - at the Millennium Hotel in London's Grosvenor Square.

Former KGB bodyguard Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitri Kovtun have been identified as the prime suspects in the killing, but both deny any involvement and remain in Russia, the inquiry heard.

As the inquiry got under way, Mr Litvinenko's widow Marina told Sky News she wants closure for her and her son Anatoly and also wants to put an end to the conspiracy theories surrounding the crime.

Sir Robert said a "prima facie case" as to the culpability of the Russian state in Mr Litvinenko's death had been established by sensitive evidence.

He said both Mr Lugovoi and Mr Kovtun have been invited to give evidence via video link from Russia, adding it was an "invitation I hope will be accepted".

Mr Tam said many theories have been put forward about what happened to Mr Litvinenko, including that he was killed but also that he accidentally poisoned himself when handling the radioactive substance as part of a smuggling deal.

It has also been suggested that Mr Litvinenko committed suicide, Mr Tam said.

Giving the background to the case, Sir Robert said Home Secretary Theresa May wrote to him in July 2013 informing him that the Government had decided not to hold an inquiry at that time.

He said: "Her decision was challenged in a claim brought on behalf of Marina and Anatoly Litvinenko (his wife and son) and was quashed in a judgment of the divisional court dated February 11 2014.

"In short, I will carry out a full and independent inquiry into the circumstances of the death of Alexander Litvinenko."


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