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Alexander Litvinenko may have killed himself accidentally, accused says | Alexander Litvinenko may have killed himself accidentally, accused says |
(about 2 hours later) | |
One of two Russians accused of poisoning the ex-Soviet spy Alexander Litvinenko in London in 2006 said on Wednesday the former KGB officer may have killed himself accidentally while handling polonium. | |
The death of Litvinenko, who accused the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, of ordering his murder, helped to drag relations between Moscow and London to new post-cold war lows. Britain last year began an inquiry into his death. | |
British authorities believe that Litvinenko was poisoned with green tea laced with polonium-210 during a meeting with two men, Dmitry Kovtun and Andrei Lugovoy. The Kremlin has denied any involvement and refused to extradite the suspects. Kovtun is due to give evidence to the London inquiry via video link. | |
At a rare news conference in Moscow, Kovtun said Litvinenko’s death could be classified as “inadvertent suicide”, adding: “My main version is that it was an accident.” Kovtun said he believed that Litvinenko had been exposed to polonium before their meeting. “I am more than certain he dealt with polonium without even knowing it. It might have been a leak and polonium was accumulating in his body gradually.” | |
Related: Alexander Litvinenko’s son: ‘My dad was trying to make Russia better’ | Related: Alexander Litvinenko’s son: ‘My dad was trying to make Russia better’ |
He added: “I don’t know whether he had it on him or someone gave it to him. It’s entirely possible he carried something with him and polonium gradually accumulated in his organism, and led to his death.” | He added: “I don’t know whether he had it on him or someone gave it to him. It’s entirely possible he carried something with him and polonium gradually accumulated in his organism, and led to his death.” |
Kovtun said his own health was largely fine despite exposure to radiation due to meeting Litvinenko. | Kovtun said his own health was largely fine despite exposure to radiation due to meeting Litvinenko. |
The inquiry said it would grant Kovtun “core participant” status , provided he met certain conditions, and expected him to give evidence by video link at the end of July. | |
Britain had initially decided not to hold an inquiry but changed its mind last July as ties between Moscow and the west soured over the conflict in Ukraine | Britain had initially decided not to hold an inquiry but changed its mind last July as ties between Moscow and the west soured over the conflict in Ukraine |