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Friday, 11/24/2006 8:50:05 AM

Friday, November 24, 2006 8:50:05 AM

Post# of 495952
Putin just another Stalin!




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Poisoned ex-spy blames Putin before death
Kremlin denies charge of former KGB agent as ‘nothing but nonsense’
The Associated Press
Updated: 8:19 a.m. ET Nov 24, 2006
LONDON - A former Russian spy who died in an apparent poisoning signed a statement in the waning hours of his life blaming Russian President Vladimir Putin and accusing him of having “no respect for life, liberty or any civilized value,” friends said Friday.

Putin’s government strongly denied involvement, calling the allegation “nothing but nonsense.”

Alexander Litvinenko’s statement, read to reporters outside the hospital where he died late Thursday, addressed the Russian leader directly.

“You have shown yourself to be unworthy of your office, to be unworthy of the trust of civilized men and women,” Litvinenko said in a statement read by his friend Alex Goldfarb.

“You may succeed in silencing one man but the howl of protest from around the world will reverberate, Mr. Putin, in your ears for the rest of your life.”

Goldfarb said Litvinenko had dictated the statement before he lost consciousness on Tuesday, and signed it in the presence of his wife, Marina.

“It’s so silly and unbelievable that it’s not worth comment,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said in Helsinki, Finland, where Putin is attending a summit with European Union leaders.

“Now the case will be investigated by relevant British services and we hope that those who are standing behind this case will be brought to justice,” he added.

Cause of illness still unclear
Litvinenko, a former KGB agent and critic of the Russian government, suffered heart failure late Thursday after days in intensive care, London’s University College Hospital said. Doctors said the cause of his illness remained a mystery.

Friends said Litvinenko had been on a quest to uncover corruption in Russia’s Federal Security Service, or FSB, and unmask the killers of another trenchant critic of the Putin’s government, the investigative journalist Anna Politkovskaya.

“He was completely convinced it was the FSB. There was no doubt in his mind who it was,” Andrei Nekrasov told The Associated Press.

‘The bastards got me’
Nekrasov, who spoke to Litvinenko just before he lost consciousness, said Litvinenko had told him: “The bastards got me, but they won’t get everybody.”

Litvinenko told police that he believed he had been poisoned on Nov. 1, while investigating the slaying of Politkovskaya. His hair fell out, his throat swelled and his immune and nervous systems were severely damaged.

Doctors treating him said they could not explain his rapid decline, and they discounted earlier theories that the 43-year-old father of three had been poisoned with the toxic metal thallium or a radioactive substance.

Dr. Geoff Bellingan, University College Hospital’s director of critical care, acknowledged he had no clue as to the cause of death.

London’s Metropolitan Police said anti-terrorist officers were investigating the matter as “an unexplained death.”

“It was an excruciating death and he was taking it as a real man,” Litvinenko’s father, Walter, said Friday.

“This regime is a mortal danger to the world,” he added, his voice choked with emotion.

Nekrasov said the former spy had begun to lose consciousness on Tuesday.

“It was a darkened room, and he would open his eyes now and again. We were encouraging him, telling him that he would survive,” Nekrasov said.

“It was so heart-rending. His son was just in a state of shock. He didn’t know what to make of it. The family just huddled in a corner of the hospital — it was terrible to look at.”

Digging into sensitive areas
Nekrasov said Litvinenko believed he had been targeted by the Kremlin because he had threatened to uncover embarrassing facts.

“He had a mission to uncover what he felt were crimes his former colleagues had committed,” Nekrasov said.

Litvinenko worked for the KGB and its successor, the FSB. In 1998, he publicly accused his superiors of ordering him to kill tycoon Boris Berezovsky and spent nine months in jail from 1999 on charges of abuse of office. He was later acquitted and in 2000 sought asylum in Britain, where Berezovsky is now also living in exile.

On the day he first felt ill, Litvinenko said he had two meetings, the first with an unnamed Russian and Andrei Lugovoy, an-KGB colleague and bodyguard to former Russian Prime Minster Yegor Gaidar.

Later, he dined with Italian security expert Mario Scaramella to discuss the October murder of Politkovskaya.

Scaramella said he showed Litvinenko an e-mail he received from a source naming Politkovskaya’s killers, and naming other targets including Litvinenko and himself.

© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/15863307/


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