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New spy claim hits Russia-UK ties Russia labels UK diplomat a spy
(about 16 hours later)
Russian security officials have accused a British diplomat based in Moscow of spying, Russian news agencies report. Russian security officials have accused a British diplomat based in Moscow of working as a spy.
They said the official, named as Christopher Bower, was a senior British intelligence officer. They said the official, named as Christopher Bowers, was a senior British intelligence officer.
The British embassy in Moscow has so far refused to make any comments on the Russian reports. A spokeswoman for the foreign office in London confirmed that a member of the British embassy was accused of spying.
The allegation follows a recent BBC report that the Russian state had been involved in the murder of its former agent Alexander Litvinenko in 2006. The claim comes after UK government sources told the BBC the Russian state was behind the murder of its former agent Alexander Litvinenko in 2006.
Mr Bower worked as a reporter for the BBC before joining the UK Foreign Office in the 1990s. Fraught ties
Mr Litvinenko died in London from radiation poisoning. UK investigators suspect former KGB agent Andrei Lugovoi of the murder, but he has always denied any involvement. "I can confirm allegations of spying by the Russian authorities [against] one of the members of the British embassy," a spokeswoman for the foreign office told Agence France Presse.
Mr Bowers worked as a reporter for the BBC before joining the UK Foreign Office in the 1990s.
In Moscow, he was the acting director of an agency providing support to British companies doing business in the country, UK Trade and Investment.
Diplomatic relations between London and Moscow have been fraught since the Litvinenko murder.Diplomatic relations between London and Moscow have been fraught since the Litvinenko murder.
Mr Litvinenko died in London from radiation poisoning. UK investigators suspect former KGB agent Andrei Lugovoi of the murder, but he has always denied any involvement.
The BBC's James Rodgers in Moscow says it is clear the meeting between Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown at the G8 summit earlier this week failed to end the disputes between the two countries.The BBC's James Rodgers in Moscow says it is clear the meeting between Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown at the G8 summit earlier this week failed to end the disputes between the two countries.