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MOSCOW, July 24 (Itar-Tass) - German security services have turned over to Russia a part of materials of their investigation of the case on polonium poisoning of ex-KGB officer Alexander Litvinenko in...
Moscow - Russian investigators said Germany had handed them documents related to the 2006 murder by polonium poisoning of Russian spy defector Alexander Litvinenko in central London, news agency RIA- Novosti reported on Thursday. German police were i...
Germany hands Litvinenko case materials to Russia24/07/2008 16:05 MOSCOW, July 24 (RIA Novosti) - Germany has passed on to Russia materials on the 2006 murder of security service defector Alexander Litvinenko, Russia's top investigators said on Thursday. German police became involved in the international hunt for Litvinenko's killer when Dmitry Kovtun, a Russian businessman living...
LeVine highlights links between Russia's dark past and harsh present. In the 16th century, for example, the mother of a prince who angered Ivan the Terrible was gang-raped and murdered, her bones fed to hunting dogs. And so it was, in our time, that it wasn't enough to have KGB defector Alexander Litvinenko quietly shot; the revenge wasn't complete until he died a prolonged and agonizing death...
... under a super-hot burner, and hear how radioactive polonium was used to kill ex-KGB man Alexander Litvinenko in London in 2006. Each element has its own video, with lively and occasionally hilarious demonstrations by chemistry experts at University of Nottingham.
Continuing the current policy of aggressive Russian reactions, Moscow warned the British that they must officially disown the statement purportedly made to a BBC-TV journalist that Her Majesty's Foreign Office believes the Russian government was behind the poisoning of the former KGB/FSB officer, Alexander Litvinenko, in London. Apparently what really set the Kremlin's teeth to gnashing was...