LONDON: The widow of former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko said on Friday that a public inquiry pointed to President Vladimir Putin as being ultimately responsible for her husband’s death, and her lawyer called the Russian leader a “tin-pot despot” who sanctioned the killing.
At the end of the six-month inquiry, Marina Litvinenko said “any reasonable person” would conclude from the evidence “that my husband was killed by agents of the Russian state ... and this could not have happened without the knowledge and consent of Mr. Putin.”
The Russian Foreign Ministry slammed the public inquiry, saying “despite its name it is not transparent, either for Russia or for the general public,” and accusing Britain of politicizing the case.
Litvinenko, who fled to London in 2000 and became a fierce critic of Putin, died in 2006, three weeks after drinking tea laced with radioactive polonium-210 at a London hotel. On his deathbed, he accused Putin of ordering his assassination - a claim Moscow denies.
British police have accused Dmitry Kovtun and Andrei Lugovoi — the two Russians Litvinenko met for tea — of carrying out the killing, sponsored by elements in the Kremlin. Both deny involvement, and Moscow refuses to extradite them.
Published in Dawn, August 1st, 2015
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