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UK 'behind Litvinenko poisoning' | UK 'behind Litvinenko poisoning' |
(30 minutes later) | |
The man suspected of poisoning ex-KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko has said it could not have happened without the involvement of British secret services. | |
Andrei Lugovoi, who denies the allegations, told a Moscow news conference that he was a scapegoat. | |
Mr Lugovoi said MI6 had recruited Mr Litvinenko and had also tried to recruit him, to collect information on Russian President Vladimir Putin. | |
The UK said the matter was a criminal rather than intelligence matter. | |
"A British citizen was killed in London and UK citizens and visitors were put at risk," a Foreign Office spokesman said. | |
The UK last week requested Mr Lugovoi's extradition in connection with the crime. But the Russian constitution forbids it from extraditing its own citizens. | |
Mr Litvinenko died in November 2006 after exposure to the radioactive isotope polonium-210. | Mr Litvinenko died in November 2006 after exposure to the radioactive isotope polonium-210. |
Polonium-210 was found in a string of places that Mr Lugovoi visited in London, but he said he was a witness, not a suspect in the case. | |
A former KGB officer and British agent, Oleg Gordievsky, described Mr Lugovoi's claims as "silly fantasies". He denied Mr Litvinenko had been working for the British secret services. | |
"He used to be... a member of the FSB, it is a domestic organisation of the KGB, and MI6 is not interested in information about the domestic service, so Litvinenko was not needed," he told BBC News. | |
'No motive' | 'No motive' |
Mr Lugovoi, himself an ex-KGB agent, said the poisoning could not have happened without some involvement from the British intelligence services. | Mr Lugovoi, himself an ex-KGB agent, said the poisoning could not have happened without some involvement from the British intelligence services. |
"Even if [British special services] hadn't done it itself, it was done under its control or connivance," he said, adding he had evidence of this, without giving details. | |
Mr Litvinenko, he said, was a British spy whom MI6 could no longer control. | |
Sacha [Litvinenko] was not my enemy Andrei Lugovoi | |
Mr Lugovoi said that either British foreign intelligence agency MI6, the Russian mafia, or fugitive Kremlin opponent Boris Berezovsky were behind the killing. | |
"The main role," however, "is played by the British special services and their agents," Mr Lugovoi said. | |
Mr Berezovsky, who has been granted asylum in Britain, has always denied any involvement in Mr Litvinenko's death. | |
Mr Lugovoi said he was "openly recruited as the British security service agent. They asked me to collect any... compromising information about President Putin and the members of his family". | |
He said he was initially asked to find economic information, but he said the large fees he was paid made him realise he was being recruited to do more than that. | He said he was initially asked to find economic information, but he said the large fees he was paid made him realise he was being recruited to do more than that. |
He went to say that he lacked the motive to kill Mr Litvinenko. | |
"Sacha [Litvinenko] was not my enemy. I didn't feel cold or hot from whatever he was doing, from the books that he was writing. I've been in business for a long time and I was not really interested," he said. | |
Mr Lugovoi also spoke about Russians who managed to get British passports by working for special services. The British public, he said, should know what certain Russians were doing in London. |