Julie Hyland
An inquiry into the death of the fugitive ex-Russian spy, Alexander
Litvinenko opened this week—nearly eight years after he was murdered.
Litvinenko
died from radioactive polonium-210 poisoning on November 23, 2006. It
is claimed that the toxic element was contained in tea he drank during a
meeting at London’s Millennium Hotel on November 1, with two former
Russian KGB agents, Andrey Lugovoi and Dmitry Kovtun.
Litvinenko
had been a lieutenant-colonel in Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB,
the successor to the KGB), but had reportedly fallen out with his
associates over corruption allegations. In 1998, he charged that the FSB
had given him the order to kill Boris Berezovsky, a Russian oligarch
and opponent of President Vladimir Putin. Litvinenko was charged with
abusing his office and spent nine months on remand before being
acquitted. He fled to Britain in 2000 and was granted political asylum.
Berezovsky,
who left Russia for the UK at the same time, became Litvinenko’s
associate and patron. The oligarch died in suspicious circumstances at
his home in March 2013.
Litvinenko went on to accuse the FSB of
bombing Moscow apartment blocks and two other cities in 1999, as a
pretext for Russia’s second invasion of Chechnya, as well as the 2006
murder of journalist and Putin critic Anna Politkovskaya. A close friend
of Chechen separatist leader Akhmed Zakayev, also exiled in London,
Litvinenko reportedly converted to Islam shortly before his death.
His
killing was greeted with banner headlines, especially after traces of
polonium-210 were discovered in hotels that Lugovoi had stayed in during
his visit and the two aircraft on which he had travelled.
However,
this was followed by damaging revelations that Litvinenko was working
for Britain’s MI6 intelligence agency. The government has refused to
confirm or deny his involvement but in 2007, the Daily Mail
cited intelligence sources claiming that Litvinenko was paid about
£2,000 per month for his services and alleged that then MI6 head, Sir
John Scarlett, was personally involved in his recruitment. There is also
evidence that he worked with Spanish, Italian and Georgian security
services.
A British request in May 2007 for Lugovoi’s extradition
to stand trial for Litvinenko’s murder was rejected by Moscow, on the
grounds that Russia’s constitution forbids the extradition of its
citizens. Lugovoi, who represents the far-right Liberal Democratic Party
of Russia in the Duma, denies the charges and has accused British
intelligence of involvement in the assassination.
The standoff
presented major political difficulties for the British government,
especially as London had become the home to numerous Russian oligarchs,
many of them political opponents of President Vladimir Putin. With
Litvinenko charging on his deathbed that his assassination had been
ordered by the Kremlin, this raised concerns that the British capital
had become the locus for internecine warfare within the Russian elite.
Russian-British
relations deteriorated further, with the UK’s decision to expel four
Russian diplomats in July that year. The move came as antagonisms
between Moscow and Washington accelerated over a range of issues,
including the US decision to station its anti-missile system in Poland
and the Czech Republic. Putin responded by signing a presidential decree
for Russia’s withdrawal from the Treaty for Conventional Armed Forces
in Europe (CFE).
Backing for the UK’s action was cautious in
Europe, however, especially given disputes over the status of Kosovo and
fears for European gas and oil security.
Moreover, under
conditions in which the Russian economy appeared to be enjoying a boom
thanks to rising oil and gas prices, sections of Britain’s ruling elite
were anxious that any further retaliatory measures would jeopardise UK
investment and alienate Russian oligarchs fuelling London’s property and
stock-market boom.
The case was parked. In 2013, a coroner’s
inquest into Litvinenko’s death—required under British law—was delayed.
Coroner Sir Robert Owen argued that his inquest was unable to hear
confidential British intelligence material relevant to the case and
requested a public inquiry, which can take such evidence in secret.
The
government refused and was challenged in the High Court by Litvinenko’s
widow, Marina. In February 2014, it ruled that ministers should
reconsider the decision. Three months later, the government agreed to a
public inquiry, headed by Owen.
The inquiry is unlikely to shed
any real light on Litvinenko’s death. The government has set strict
limitations. Much of the most important evidence will be heard in
secret, with some of the 70 witnesses testifying from behind a screen.
Others will be given complete secrecy. Parts of Owen’s report, which is
not expected until the end of the year, will remain classified. Even
Litvinenko’s widow will not be allowed to see the secret parts of the
judge’s report.
Any examination of the role of Britain’s security
services, and whether they could have prevented Litvinenko’s killing,
has been ruled out. Notwithstanding the claim that the inquiry will
impartially consider all theories—which include that Litvinenko was
involved in smuggling polonium-210 and inadvertently poisoned
himself—Owen has previously stated that he has seen evidence amounting
to a “prima facie case” that Litvinenko was murdered by the Russian
state.
The timing of the government’s decision and the opening of
the inquiry is politically significant. It came against the backdrop of
the Western-backed, right wing putsch in Kiev in February 2014, and the
downing of Malaysian passenger flight MH17 over eastern Ukraine in July
the same year.
Without any evidence, the NATO powers seized on
the MH17 atrocity to press ahead with long-standing geo-political plans
for the military encirclement of Russia and the destabilisation of the
Putin regime. The US and the European Union imposed financial and
diplomatic sanctions against Moscow which, combined with collapsing oil
prices, have devastated the Russian economy. NATO has stepped up the
stationing of troops and armaments on Russia’s borders and is now
directly training Ukrainian forces, which include fascist militias, for
Kiev’s bloody civil war in the east.
The forces overseeing the
inquiry are poised to use it not to determine the circumstances of
Litvinenko’s murder, but as grist for the mill of NATO’s anti-Russian
propaganda campaign. The tone of the inquiry was set by Ben Emmerson QC,
in his opening statement. Emmerson, a visiting professor in human
rights law at Oxford University and United Nations special rapporteur on
counter-terrorism and human rights, charged Putin directly with
ordering Litvinenko’s murder.
Litvinenko was “eliminated” because
he had made an enemy of the “close knit group of criminals who
surrounded and still surround Vladimir Putin and keep his corrupt regime
in power,” he said.
Accusing Moscow of carrying out “an act of
nuclear terrorism on the streets of a major city which put the lives of
numerous other members of the public at risk,” he said the inquiry would
unmask Putin as “nothing more or less than a common criminal dressed up
as a head of state.”
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