Kremlin assassin Andrei Lugovoi is to rub England's face right in it later
today.
Lugovoi'll be putting up 2 fingers to Chelsea fans and Manchester United fans -
and indeed to all English football fans and patriots alike.
Lugovoi's going to the Manchester United vs. Chelsea Champions League final
Wednesday.
He's going confident that Kremlin assassins like him can kill anyone in England
they want - Polonium-210 in the tea, radioactive poison - like he did to
Alexander Litvinenko in London - and escape to Russia.
Lugovoi has killed in England - everyone knows it - and what is England going to
do? Stand and watch and take it?
What is Her Majesty's government going to do? Nothing?
Have the English people become such fools and cowards that they'll cheer in a
crowd alongside those who could assassinate any one of them?
Have the nation who defeated Hitler become such wimps?
Is this the end of England? Lugovoi is telling England the score all right -
England - 0, Polonium - 210
Moscow Times wrote:
Lugovoi Gets a Ticket in a Buyer's Market
He'll be entering a lion's den, but Andrei Lugovoi, the man wanted in Britain
for the London murder of former FSB officer Alexander Litvinenko, is set to
brave a stadium full of English fans Wednesday evening to watch Manchester
United take on Chelsea.
http://www.moscowtimes.ru/article/600/42/367569.htm
Yes, it'll be quite a night to be an Englishman.
Lugovoi - face of an assassin.
http://www.cbc.ca/gfx/images/news/photos/2007/05/22/lugovoi-cp-2989757.jpg
Is it easier to forget about this England?
- Get Putin!
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/6679853.stm
The ex-KGB man accused of murder
The ex-KGB man accused of murder Andrei Lugovoi, who is accused of killing
ex-KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko says Britain wanted to portray him as a
"Russian James Bond".
The Crown Prosecution Service says it has enough evidence to charge Mr Lugovoi
with the murder of Mr Litvinenko.
But at a dramatic news conference in Moscow on 31 May, Mr Lugovoi protested his
innocence and said he would fight to clear his name.
"They [Britain] think that they found a Russian James Bond that penetrates the
nuclear facilities and, in cold blood, poisoning his friend, and at the same
time poisoning himself, his friends, his wife and children," he said.
Mr Lugovoi claimed that either the UK's MI6 intelligence agency, the Russian
mafia, or Kremlin opponent Boris Berezovsky had carried out the killing.
Mr Berezovsky denies any involvement in Mr Litvinenko's death and said Mr
Lugovoi's comments suggested that the Kremlin was responsible for the murder.
"Everything about Mr Lugovoi's words and presentation made it obvious that he is
acting on Kremlin instruction," he said.
Formal request
Mr Lugovoi claimed that Mr Litvinenko was a British spy and that British special
services played the main role in his death.
"Even if (British special services) hadn't done it itself, it was done under its
control or connivance," said Mr Lugovoi.
The Foreign Office said that the matter was a criminal rather than an
intelligence matter.
"A British citizen was killed in London and UK citizens and visitors were put at
risk," a Foreign Office spokesman said.
Mr Lugovoi also claimed the British secret service tried to recruit him to
provide "compromising information" on President Vladimir Putin.
Although the CPS has issued a formal request for Mr Lugovoi's extradition,
Russian officials have said they will not hand him over because it would violate
the country's constitution.
The former KGB officer, who now heads a private security firm, had tea with Mr
Litvinenko at London's Millennium Mayfair Hotel on the day he fell ill.
Traces of the radioactive substance polonium-210, which caused Mr Litvinenko's
death, have also been found in a string of places Mr Lugovoi visited in London.
Medical checks
In February sources told the BBC Mr Lugovoi was the "most likely poisoner".
A trail of polonium-210 traces have been found which are believed to have
roughly matched his movements.
On 16 October Mr Lugovoi visited Parkes Hotel in Knightsbridge, where two rooms
were later found to be contaminated.
In mid-October he met Mr Litvinenko in the Itsu sushi restaurant in Piccadilly,
which was also found to have traces of the substance.
Days later he stayed at the Sheraton Park Lane Hotel in London's Mayfair where
another two rooms were found with heavy contamination.
On 1 November came the meeting with Mr Litvinenko, along with two other
Russians, in the Pine Bar at the Millennium Hotel, which investigators believe
proved fatal.
A cup, teapot, the bar and bar staff are all believed to have tested positive
for polonium-210.
Investigators suspect that a phial of polonium-210 could have been tipped into
Mr Litvinenko's tea.
Mr Lugovoi has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing, suggesting that someone has
been trying to frame him.
He underwent medical checks in hospital after traces of polonium-210 were
reportedly found in his body.
He has also been questioned by Russian and British detectives in December as a
witness.
Mr Lugovoi said he met Mr Litvinenko 10 years ago, but was not a friend or
business partner.
He said his security work brought him into contact with Mr Berezovsky, who also
knew Mr Litvinenko.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/6679853.stm
Published: 2007/05/31 11:33:24 GMT
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/6679853.stm
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