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Poisoned: Spy Who Quit Russia For Britain (Aleksander Litvinenko)

Britain expels Russian diplomats over Litvinenko

Russia warned Britain tonight its decision to expel four Russian diplomats over the murder of Alexander Litvinenko would have "the most serious consequences".

The Cold War-style expulsions - the first in a decade - were announced in an emergency Commons statement this afternoon by David Miliband, the Foreign Secretary.

Mr Miliband also told MPs that the Government had suspended negotiations on simplified visa rules and was reviewing bilateral cooperation on a range of other issues because of Moscow's "extremely disappointing" decision not to extradite the chief suspect, former KGB officer Andrei Lugovoy.

"This is a situation the Government has not sought and does not welcome. But we have no choice but to address it," Mr Miliband said."We have chosen to expel four particular diplomats in order to send a clear and proportionate signal about the seriousness of this case."

The initial Russian reaction stopped short of tit-for-tat expulsions - but they may not be long coming. At an impromptu briefing in Moscow, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, Mikhail Kamynin, called Britain's decision "immoral".

"They should understand well in London that the provocative actions conceived by the British authorities will not go unanswered and cannot fail to produce the most serious consequences for Russian-British relations as a whole," he added.

British prosecutors allege that Mr Lugovoy, a Moscow businessmen, fed Litvinenko polonium-210, a poisonous radioactive isotope, in a pot of tea in a Mayfair hotel on November 1 last year.

Traces of the substance were found at around a dozen other sites in London, including three hotels, a stadium, two planes and an office building

Mr Litvinenko, also a former KGB officer who had become a fierce critic of the Kremlin over its campaigns in Chechnya, died on November 23 after a dramatic deathbed statement in which he accused President Vladimir Putin of being behind his killing. He had become a British citizen shortly before he was poisoned.

The Crown Prosecution Service announced its decision to seek Mr Lugovoy's extradition on May 22, but the request was formally turned down by Russia a week ago.

Mr Miliband said: "The Russian Government has failed to register either how seriously we treat this case or the seriousness of the issues involved, despite lobbying at the highest level and clear explanations of our need for a satisfactory response."

Not only had Mr Litvinenko suffered a "horrifying and lingering death in front of his family", he said, but hundreds of others had been put at risk of radiation as well.

"Given the importance of the issue and Russia’s failure to cooperate to find a solution, we need an appropriate response," he told MPs.

The expulsions marked the depth of British concern at the Litvinenko murder. It is not clear what other cards Mr Miliband has left to play if only because the economic deck appears stacked firmly in Russia’s favour.

Foreign investment is flooding into Russia and is forecast to be $70 billion this year, compared to $42 billion in 2006 with British companies at the forefront. The strength of British investment is in spite of the uncomfortable experiences of Shell and BP in being forced by the Kremlin to cede control of key oil and gas projects to state-owned Gazprom.

British firms invested $5.5 billion in Russia last year, making it the largest foreign investor. Russia received $3.1 billion in direct British investment in the first three months of this year alone, almost nine times more than the $364 million invested by US companies.

According to the British Embassy in Moscow, the visa review will affect officials and not ordinary Russians. The embassy now issues 700 visas per day to Russians seeking to visit Britain, up 25 per cent on this time last year.

Russian companies have made the London Stock Exchange their chosen home for stock flotations. They raised $30 billion in initial public offerings (IPO) last year and floats worth at least $40 billion are expected to be concluded in 2007.

The $8 billion flotation of VTB, Russia’s second-largest bank, in London in May was the largest global IPO so far this year. London has handled all six international IPOs by Russian companies so far this year, worth $12.2 billion.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/w ... 085879.ece
 
Wow! Brown kicks arse!

(Can't imagine Blair doing this, he just sucked up to everyone.)

Let's hope it doesn't backfire.....
 
Europeans Lukewarm as Britain Tries to Rally Support In Row

Europeans lukewarm as Britain tries to rally support in row with Russia

· German officials suggest UK has overreacted

· Only France offers strong support over extradition


Julian Borger, Luke Harding and David Gow

Wednesday July 18, 2007

Guardian


The furious diplomatic row between Britain and Russia spilled into Europe yesterday as Britain looked for solidarity from its EU partners and Russia warned them not to get involved.

Britain failed to win the immediate, concerted response it was seeking. The Foreign Office had wanted a quick statement from the Portuguese, who hold the EU presidency, that would express a united European position denouncing Moscow for its lack of cooperation over the Litvinenko murder inquiry. But late yesterday the Portuguese prime minister, Jose Socrates, had been unable to find a consensus among his fellow leaders.

A statement may come today, but the delay may have weakened its impact.

Meanwhile, the Portuguese foreign minister, Luis Amado, repeatedly emphasised that the matter was "a bilateral issue" between Britain and Russia.

The French offered particularly vocal support, but German foreign ministry officials reportedly believed Britain had overreacted by expelling four diplomats. Several other European leaders were waiting for the Russian response before committing themselves.

That response was put off yesterday, but Russia vowed that when its answer came it would be "targeted and appropriate". Russia's deputy foreign minister, Alexander Grushkov, said Moscow would "soon" inform the UK of its counter-measures but added that any Russian response would take into account the interests of ordinary British tourists and businessmen.

The Russian ambassador to London, Yuri Fedotov, said a response would "take time", explaining: "We are serious people."

In his remarks, Mr Grushkov hinted that Russia would seek to isolate Gordon Brown's government from its EU partners, a technique Moscow has successfully employed over energy and gas supplies.

Mr Grushkov said Britain was exploiting the murder of Alexander Litvinenko for its own selfish and "unilateralist" reasons.

He said: "Britain will appeal to EU solidarity. We hope that commonsense will prevail within the EU and that its members will not give in to attempts to turn relations between Russia and the EU into a tool to achieve unilateral political goals. These have nothing in common with EU and Russia's real partnership interests."

The foreign secretary, David Miliband is due to meet his French counterpart, Bernard Kouchner, today to press Britain's case, and has already secured strong French support in the effort to secure the extradition of Andrei Lugovoi, the former KGB agent accused of poisoning Alexander Litvinenko in London with radioactive polonium-210. Mr Kouchner's spokeswoman said yesterday: "The murder of a British national on his home soil, using a substance that put at risk the lives of thousands of others is a particularly serious matter. Given the gravity of the matter, we stand alongside the United Kingdom in its concern that justice be done."

"We call on Moscow to respond to the demands of British justice in a constructive manner ... so that the perpetrators of this crime are brought to justice and punished."

However, the German response was far more guarded. Gordon Brown met the chancellor, Angela Merkel, on Monday in Berlin, and repeated Britain's call for "action has to be taken" on Mr Lugovoi's extradition, but Chancellor Merkel's response was reported to be lukewarm.

According to European diplomatic sources, the German foreign ministry believes the expulsion of four diplomats and the freezing of bilateral negotiations on visas was a British overreaction.

Europe's biggest economy has the most to lose from a general deterioration of EU-Russian relations. Russia views Germany as its most important economic partner and trade between the two rose 37.7% last year to €53.5bn, with German exports up 35%. Energy drives the Russo-German relationship, with Gazprom, the Russian state-controlled gas giant, supplying around 40% of Germany's needs.

Mr Miliband will try to drum up more European backing at a foreign ministers meeting in Brussels next week, but observers warned that, barring an overwhelming and disproportionate Russian response, it would be hard to forge a consensus.

Katinka Barysch, deputy director of the London-based Centre for European reform, said: "At some point the EU needs to stand up and say: 'Russia can do whatever it wants in Russia but on our territory you have to play by our rules'."

Mark Leonard, director of the European Council on Foreign Relations, said that Britain had been less successful than Russia in convincing its European partners of the merits of its case. "Quite a lot of people are convinced by the Russian argument that we lecture them about the rule of law and now we're asking them to overrule their own constitution," he said.

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007
 
I have no idea why Brown would ask the EU to endorse or support his decision re the extradition of the Russian intelligence officers.

Why would the EU endorse/support any decision the UK makes?
 
coldelephant said:
I have no idea why Brown would ask the EU to endorse or support his decision re the extradition of the Russian intelligence officers.

Why would the EU endorse/support any decision the UK makes?
Quite!

I've been banging on about this for some time here:
http://www.forteantimes.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=22226

The EU just wants to absorb Britain, like a spider absrbs the juices of a fly... :evil:
 
Russia Expels Four British Diplomats

Russia expels four British diplomats

Thu Jul 19, 2007 2:13PM BST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia said on Thursday it would expel four British diplomats from Moscow, retaliating for Britain's decision earlier this week to send home four Russian diplomats.

Foreign Ministry chief spokesman Mikhail Kamynin said the British ambassador had been handed a note earlier "in connection with the unfriendly actions of Britain towards Russia".

"He was given an official note declaring four British embassy staff in Moscow are now persona non grata and they should leave the territory of the Russian Federation within 10 days," Kamynin added.

He did not identify the diplomats.

The row, which has chilled relations between the two former Cold War foes to their frostiest since the fall of the Soviet Union, was prompted by Russia's refusal to extradite a murder suspect to face trial in London.

Kamynin also told reporters that Moscow would stop issuing visas for British officials and that recent British government statements made continued cooperation impossible with London in the war on terror.

© Reuters 2007. All rights reserved.
 
UK Is Attacked In Litvinenko Row

UK is attacked in Litvinenko row

A senior Russian official has attacked the UK's decision to expel four Russian diplomats as "groundless, inappropriate, unjustified".


The Russian prosecutor general's office said the UK's decision over the expulsions was politically motivated.

The UK expelled the four after Russia refused to extradite Andrei Lugovoi - accused of killing ex-KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko in London.

Prosecutor Alexander Zvyagintsev said the refusal was "on the basis of law".

Under the European Convention on Extradition 1957, Russia has the right to refuse the extradition of a citizen, and its constitution expressly forbids it.

Mr Zvyagintsev also said in a press conference that the Russians had "grounds to doubt the objectivity of the British justice system".

"There is no evidence in the materials provided by Britain that there was an objective investigation of the Litvinenko case by Scotland Yard," he added.

Russian prosecutors would open a case against Lugovoi if there was evidence to support such an investigation, he said.

Mr Zvyagintsev said he had not ruled out the involvement of "persons from Litvinenko's closest London circle".

Last week, four Russian embassy staff were expelled from the UK after the British extradition request was refused.

That prompted Moscow to retaliate by asking British embassy staff to leave within 10 days.

Mr Litvinenko, who had taken UK citizenship, died of exposure to radioactive polonium-210 in London in November 2006.

Traces of the radioactive isotope were found in several places visited by Mr Lugovoi, who denies any involvement in Mr Litvinenko's death.

Story from BBC NEWS:

Published: 2007/07/23 10:25:03 GMT

© BBC MMVII
 
Russia suspect running to be MP

A Russian businessman wanted in Britain on suspicion of murdering Alexander Litvinenko says he will stand for election to the Russian parliament.

Andrei Lugovoi denies any involvement in former Russian agent Mr Litvinenko's death from poisoning in London in November 2006.

He has said he will run for the Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR) of the Russian nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky.

If elected in December, Mr Lugovoi would get immunity from prosecution.

"I confirm LDPR leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky's announcement that I have agreed to join the party's electoral list," Mr Lugovoi told Interfax agency on Sunday.

Strenuous denials

He said he profoundly respected Mr Zhirinovsky and his party.

"But I will be ready to comment only after the party congress which I will attend," Mr Lugovoi added.

Mr Zhirinovsky announced on Saturday Mr Lugovoi would feature in second place on the LDPR list, offering him an eligible position if the party crosses the electoral threshold of 7% in parliamentary elections scheduled for 2 December, Russian media say.

Mr Litvinenko, a former intelligence official and a critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin who had taken refuge in Britain, was given a fatal dose of radioactive polonium-210 and died in London last November.

Britain has demanded the extradition of Mr Lugovoi, a former KGB agent, who attended a meeting with Mr Litvinenko on 1 November.

Russia has refused the demand and Mr Lugovoi has strenuously denied any involvement in Mr Litvinenko's death.
 
There's a very long article in the Indie today that questions whether L. was actually murdered. Could he have accidentally poisoned himself?
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/europ ... 19534.html

I don't have time to precis the article myself, so I'm just drawing the attention of conspiracy theorists to it. Enjoy!
 
Russia 'backed Litvinenko murder'

The murder of former Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko was carried out with the backing of the Russian state, Whitehall sources have told the BBC.

A senior security official has told Newsnight there are "very strong indications it was a state action".

Mr Litvinenko, who was a fierce critic of former Russian President Vladimir Putin, was poisoned in London in 2006.

UK investigators suspect former KGB agent Andrei Lugovoi of the murder, but he has always denied any involvement.

The BBC has been told that Russia's internal security organisation, the FSB, operated under Mr Putin with far more autonomy than the organisations usually entrusted with foreign espionage operations.

Our source said: "We very strongly believe the Litvinenko case to have had some state involvement."

Newsnight has also learned that officers at MI5 believe they thwarted an attempt last summer to kill another Russian dissident, Boris Berezovsky.

The BBC's source said the Berezovsky incident showed "continued FSB willingness to consider operations against people in the West".

And they claimed the targeting of Russian government critics in the UK had serious diplomatic repercussions, saying: "[It] messes up the relationship big time."

In November, head of MI5 Jonathan Evans expressed concern that there had been "no decrease" in the number of Russian covert intelligence officers operating in the UK since the end of the Cold War.

The service believes there are around 30 operating from Russian diplomatic missions here.

In May 2007, the Crown Prosecution Service formally submitted an extradition request to Moscow for Mr Lugovoi to stand trial in Britain.

That request remains current, but Russia has refused to cooperate saying it would be against its constitution to do so.

UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown is thought to have raised the case as he held his first face-to-face talks with new Russian president Dmitry Medvedev at the G8 summit in Japan.

Newsnight's report on the story can be seen on BBC2 at 2230 BST on 7 July


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7494142.stm
 
Who cares? His family maybe. It was a horrible death. He was a player in dangerous games. No clear enough moral to be learned. Leave it alone and move on. :(
 

Bad Blood: The Life And Death Of Alexander Litvinenko
Screen Shot 2013-10-08 at 11.17.25
First published six months ago behind a pay wall, now ungated, and a good thing too. A gripping account of how Russian secret agents killed Litvinenko, a KGB defector, in London in 2006, using polonium-210, a radioactive poison so esoteric that it took scientists more than a month to work out what it was — by which time Litvinenko was dead. The man who probably led the hit squad has since become a top Russian politician (8,892 words)


https://www.readmatter.com/a/bad-blood- ... itvinenko/
 
Written, in his simple but very effective and readable style, by Will Storr - who may be well known to some of us for, Will Storr Vs the Supernatural.
 
Litvinenko inquiry: the proof Russia was involved in dissident's murder
National Security Agency (NSA) obtained communications between key individuals in London and Moscow from the time that Alexander Litvinenko was poisoned with radioactive material
By Claire Newell, in Washington DC, Lyndsey Telford in Rome, and Edward Malnick in London
10:00PM GMT 23 Jan 2015

American spies secretly intercepted communications between those involved in the murder of Alexander Litvinenko and provided the key evidence that he was killed in a Russian-backed “state execution”, The Telegraph can disclose.
The National Security Agency (NSA) obtained electronic communications between key individuals in London and Moscow from the time that the former spy was poisoned with radioactive material in central London. The evidence was passed to the British authorities.
A source familiar with the investigation confirmed the existence of American “intelligence material”. They said it would have been “inadmissible” in court, but that the British authorities were “confident that this was a state execution”.
The disclosure comes ahead of the start of the public inquiry into Litvinenko's death in 2006, which will see hearings, many of which will be held in secret, carried out over a nine-week period in the High Court from Tuesday.

etc...

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukn...Russia-was-involved-in-dissidents-murder.html
 
'Stuff of James Bond'

The papers are gripped by the opening developments in the public inquiry into the death of ex-Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko. Mr Litvinenko died in a London hospital in 2006 from radiation poisoning.

The Telegraph says the inquiry was told that thousands of lives were put at risk in an "act of nuclear terrorism" on the streets of London to murder Mr Litvinenko.
In an editorial, the Telegraph says of Vladimir Putin: "The inquiry into the grisly death of Alexander Litvinenko in London eight years ago is a deeply human reminder, if one were needed, of why the West cannot trust the Russian leader accused of ordering the assassination.
"The opening day heard an almost incredible tale of how Russian secret service agents deposited traces of the deadly radioactive substance polonium-210 around our capital as they sought an opportunity to poison their one-time colleague."

_80567854_80567853.jpg

Marina Litvinenko attended the first day of the inquiry at the High Court

The Guardian says that in scathing terms, Ben Emmerson QC, acting for Mr Litvinenko's widow, Marina, suggested that Mr Litvinenko was the victim of a dysfunctional state in which criminals and politicians had merged.

The Independent, which pictures Mrs Litvinenko leaving the High Court after the opening of the inquiry on its front page, said the nuclear terrorism claim was made against Mr Putin in an incendiary start to the inquiry.
Looking at the background to the case, the Independent says: "It is the stuff of James Bond, 007: poisoned by a deadly radioactive isotope administered through a genteel cup of tea.
"Except the victim's painful death - as the radiation travelled through his blood, coming to rest in his kidneys, liver, spleen, even his bone marrow, where it destroyed internal organs and sabotaged his body's immune system - is too brutal for Hollywood."

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-the-papers-31013829
 
Hmm, is someone trying to send a message here?

Fighter jets scrambled to intercept two Russian bombers off Bournemouth coast

...


Bournemouth East MP Tobias Ellwood, who is also a foreign office minister, said: “I will be investigating it.
“The intrusions by the Russians are a regular occurrence but normally take place in the North Sea.
“This is a worrying advancement of their probing of air space but not totally unsurprising given Putin’s recent actions."

He said he would be leading a debate among EU foreign ministers over further sanctions against Russia over the situation in Ukraine.
The ministers are expected to meet today, with diplomats expected to agree on additional punitive measures in principle.

Mr Ellwood added: “He (Putin) wants to look strong by doing air incursions such as this.
“Our aircraft are vastly superior but nevertheless it is a worrying development.
“It is important that the MOD provide a full explanation as to what happened.

etc...

http://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/ne...two_Russian_bombers_over_Bournemouth/?ref=rss
 
See, I told you so! :p

Russian bombers flying near Southampton 'linked to Litvinenko inquiry'

A former RAF pilot has suggested the presence of Russian military planes close to UK airspace could be linked to the Litvinenko inquiry.
Andrew Brookes, a fellow of defence think-tank the Royal United Services Institute, said he wondered about the timing of their arrival yesterday.

The Foreign Office said the jets caused ''disruption to civil aviation''.
RAF Typhoons were scrambled to escort the planes ''throughout the time they were in the UK area of interest'', a spokeswoman said.
The incident was part of an ''increasing pattern of out-of-area operations by Russian aircraft'', she added.
Russia's ambassador was summoned to account for the incident, it has since been revealed.

Mr Brookes said: ''They are basically strutting their stuff around the globe.
''Litvinenko ... I just wonder sometimes whether because of the timing of that inquiry this is somehow of associated with that.
''Just to say 'you might have your way of doing things, but don't forget we can still project our power the way we want to do it'.
''There is no threat, but it's a massive disruption. It's basically two fingers from the Russians.''
It was a way of saying that Russia is ''still a force to be reckoned with on the world stage'' that should be taken into account, he added.

The inquiry into the death of poisoned Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko began this week.
He died from radiation poisoning in London in 2006, nearly three weeks after he drank tea laced with polonium.
The former KGB agent, who fled to the UK, was a vocal critic of the Kremlin and worked for MI6.

http://www.dailyecho.co.uk/news/117...r_Southampton__linked_to_Litvinenko_inquiry_/
 
They're back:
RAF jets scrambled after Russian aircraft seen off Cornwall
_51606573_fa1d16c0-9c6c-4f82-b0b8-ab66ddd94f78.jpg


RAF jets were scrambled after two Russian military aircraft were seen off the Cornwall coast, the Ministry of Defence says.
It comes after Defence Secretary Michael Fallon warned of a "real and present danger" of Russia trying to destabilise the Baltic states of Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-31530840
 
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Polonium-210? it's yours for $69, no questions asked
Times Online (U.K.) ^ | Nov 30, 2006 | Tony Halpin in Moscow
Posted on 11/30/2006, 5:49:00 PM by jdm

The radioactive poison used to kill the former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko is being offered for sale over the internet for less than £40.

A company in the US claims to supply polonium-210 to anyone for just $69 plus postage and packing. A three-pack set of “alpha, beta, gamma” radioactive isotopes also includes polonium-210.

United Nuclear, based in Albuquerque, New Mexico, tells purchasers: “If you’re looking for clean, accurate, certified radiation sources, here they are. . . All isotopes are produced fresh in a nuclear reactor and shipped directly to you.”

The company says that it has supplied radioactive materials to “the science hobbyist”, businesses, government bodies and teachers since 1998. “We specialise in small orders.” United Nuclear assures customers that they run no risk of being tipped off to the US Department for Homeland Security.

“Chemical suppliers routinely forward customers’ names, along with their purchases, to government officials/Homeland Security officials etc. We do not — and never will. We respect your privacy and will fight for it,” the company’s website states.

The Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico describes polonium-210 as 250 billion times more toxic than hydrogen cyanide. The apparent availability of polonium-210 intensifies the problems facing Scotland Yard detectives in establishing the source of the poison that killed Mr Litvinenko in London last week.

Many commentators have asserted that the material could only have come from a state-controlled nuclear facility, leading critics of President Putin to point the finger at Russia’s secret service.

Sergei Kiriyenko, head of Russia’s atomic energy agency, has revealed that it sells 8g of polonium-210 each month to American companies for “scientific purposes”.

United Nuclear says it accepts orders only through its online service and that materials can be sent only to addresses in the US. But it is not difficult to arrange for a delivery in the US to be forwarded to another country.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1746485/posts
 
Putin a pedophile?

More text on link...

Alexander Litvinenko accused Vladimir Putin of being a paedophile four months before he was poisoned
Mr Litvinenko wrote an article making the accusations four months before he was poisoned
The report found there was a 'personal dimension' to the antagonism between Mr Putin and Mr Litvinenko AP

Alexander Litvinenko
’s accusation that Vladimir Putin was a paedophile may have been one of the motives for the Russian government to order his assassination, a report into the former Russian spy's death has found.

Sir Robert Owen’s inquiry looked at the former FSB agent’s “highly personal attacks” on the Russian President, which culminated with an article on the Chechenpress website in July 2006, four months before he was poisoned.

Mr Litvinenko’s article, which was published as evidence in the report, started by recounting a meeting between Mr Putin and a boy “aged four or five” in a square near the Kremlin.

“Putin kneeled, lifted the boy’s T-shirt and kissed his stomach,” Mr Litvinenko wrote.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/u...sed-putin-of-being-a-paedophile-a6824806.html
 
A scientist, commits suicide via self-inflicted stab wounds?

"His post mortem was carried out by Home Office pathologist Dr Nicholas Hunt, who said it was possible for a person to self-inflict the number of wounds he did before becoming unconscious

Dr Hunt also conducted the post mortem on weapons expert Dr David Kelly in 2003, who was found dead in Oxfordshire woodland around 10 miles from where Dr Puncher lived
".

Seriously? Why on earth would he have been selected for this task? I'm not convinced in any sense by any of these pantomimes- what on earth should be concluded from this specific aspect, alone?

From six years ago
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...cholas-Hunt-cautioned-breaking-GMC-rules.html

"Fresh questions were raised last night over the professional conduct of the pathologist who performed Dr David Kelly's autopsy.

It has emerged that Nicholas Hunt is still under a five-year warning for breaking General Medical Council guidelines."
 
A scientist, commits suicide via self-inflicted stab wounds?

"His post mortem was carried out by Home Office pathologist Dr Nicholas Hunt, who said it was possible for a person to self-inflict the number of wounds he did before becoming unconscious

Dr Hunt also conducted the post mortem on weapons expert Dr David Kelly in 2003, who was found dead in Oxfordshire woodland around 10 miles from where Dr Puncher lived
".

Seriously? Why on earth would he have been selected for this task? I'm not convinced in any sense by any of these pantomimes- what on earth should be concluded from this specific aspect, alone?
Suicided by someone else? People does not need two knives to commit suicide.
 
David Kelly's death has never been satisfactorily accounted for, to my mind. Now this apparent link to Litvinenko's death just muddies the waters still further...
 
Satisfactorily accounted for? The details have been sealed for 50 years or so, that is a pretty clear admission of guilt.
 
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