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Key suspect says he won’t testify at inquiry into death of ex-spy Litvinenko

One of the main suspects in the poisoning of ex-Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko says he will be willing to testify at an inquiry into the death.
One of the main suspects in the poisoning of ex-Russian agent Alexander Litvinenko says he will be willing to testify at an inquiry into the death. AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin

LONDON – A British judge investigating the death of former Russian security agent Alexander Litvinenko accused a key suspect Monday of manipulating an inquiry by agreeing to testify, then refusing at the last minute.

Russian businessman Dmitry Kovtun had been due to appear at judge Robert Owen’s inquiry by video link from Russia.

But inquiry lawyer Robin Tam said that Kovtun now claimed to be bound by obligations of confidentiality to an ongoing Russian investigation.

Owen said Kovtun’s last-minute change of stance gave rise to “the gravest suspicion that an attempt is being made to manipulate the situation.”

He has previously warned Kovtun not to try to delay the inquiry, which began in January – more than eight years after Litvinenko’s death.

The KGB officer-turned-Kremlin critic died in 2006 after drinking tea laced with radioactive polonium-210 at a London hotel. On his deathbed, Litvinenko accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of ordering his assassination, and British authorities have also alleged that the Russian state was involved – an accusation that Moscow denies.

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British police have accused Kovtun and another Russian man, Andrei Lugovoi, as being suspects. Both deny involvement, and Russia refuses to extradite them.

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Lugovoi has refused to co-operate with the British probe, but Kovtun said in March that he was willing to give evidence.

He has suggested that Litvinenko may have poisoned himself accidentally while handling radioactive material.

Owen gave Kovtun until Tuesday morning to begin his testimony. Otherwise, the inquiry will wrap up without him.

Ben Emmerson, lawyer for Litvinenko’s widow Marina, said he believed there was little chance Kovtun would give evidence.

“It appears the proceedings are being manipulated in a co-ordinated way between Mr. Kovtun – the murderer – and the Russian state which sent him to commit the murder,” Emmerson said.

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