The Scotsman

Widow of Litvinenko says case is ‘deja vu’

- By RUSSELL JACKSON

The news that a former Russian spy is in hospital amid mysterious circumstan­ces has prompted comparison­s with the death of Alexander Litvinenko – including from his widow.

A Russian dissident who became a British citizen, Mr Litvinenko died aged 43 in November 2006, three weeks after he drank tea laced with radioactiv­e polonium-210.

A public inquiry concluded in 2016 that the killing of Mr Litvinenko, a critic of Vladimir Putin, had “probably” been carried out with the approval of the Russian president.

As Sergei Skripal, 66, fought for his life after being found unconsciou­s on a bench, Marina Litvinenko said: “It’s like deja vu, (like) what happened to me 11 years ago.”

She added: “In Russia it is still (an) old-fashioned and oldstyle KGB system… It’s still all the same. If there is an order to kill somebody it will happen.”

The Litvinenko inquiry found two Russian men – Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitri Kovtun – had deliberate­ly – 0 Alexander Litvinenko was poisoned in 2006 poisoned their victim, leading to an agonising death.

It said the use of the radioactiv­e substance was a “strong indicator” of state involvemen­t and that the two men had probably been acting under the direction of the FSB, Russia’s state agency.

Possible motives included Mr Litvinenko’s work for British intelligen­ce agencies, his criticism of the FSB, and his associatio­n with other Russian dissidents, while it was said there was also a “personal dimension” to the antagonism between him and Mr Putin.

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