Citizen G'kar: Musings on Earth

September 16, 2007

Former KGB Assassin Runs for Russian Parliament

Lugovoi appears to be seeking his reward for poisoning Alexander Litvinenko last November with polonium 210 in London. What does that say about Putin's Russia? Doesn't sound like there has been much change in Russia since the USSR fragmented.
StarTribune.com
The former KGB officer accused in Britain of fatally poisoning a Kremlin foe in London with a radioactive isotope said Sunday he was seeking a seat in Russia's parliament.


The accused former officer, Andrei Lugovoi, said on state TV that he would run as a member of the ultranationalist Liberal Democratic Party led by Vladimir Zhirinovsky. If elected, Lugovoi would be immune from prosecution in Russia.


Britain's Crown Prosecution Service has sought the extradition of Lugovoi, whom it accused in May of killing Alexander Litvinenko last November with polonium 210. Litvinenko, also a former KGB officer, was a self-styled whistleblower and a harsh critic of the Kremlin and of Russian President Vladimir Putin. His wife and associates have said his killing was ordered by the Kremlin and that Lugovoi poisoned Litvinenko about three weeks before his death by slipping polonium into his tea when the men met at a London hotel.


Both the Kremlin and Lugovoi have repeatedly denied a role in the killing. Russia has formally refused to extradite him. In an interview broadcast Sunday, he said he had not wanted a life in politics but now was seeking one "due to the disgusting actions toward me by the United Kingdom's justice system."

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