Britain makes U-turn on ex-KGB agent Litvinenko murder inquiry

Alexander Litvinenko
AFP/Scanpix

But on Tuesday, that decision was reversed, when the Home Secretary announced a public inquiry into the murder of Alexander Litvinenko.

Both the government and Litvinenko’s widow denied the turnabout was linked to the the shooting of a Malaysia airlines jet.

“I believed one day it will happen but it’s happened today when it’s a very difficult situation in the world and the relationship between Russia and all west community and what happened in Ukraine it makes all my case now in a very different prospect,” says Marina Litvinenko. “But I’m definitely sure it was not taken because of this. The decision of public inquiry it would be anyway. But I think it just happened and not just because for today. But it makes very, very strong feeling about, particularly for me.”

Litvinenko made headlines around the world when he died after drinking radioactive tea at a London hotel in 2006. A fierce critic of the Kremlin, he had accused Russian President Vladimir Putin of ordering his murder before he died.

Russia has rejected claims it ordered the killing but the coroner has said there was evidence the Kremlin was involved.

It has been nearly eight years since he was laid to rest. Now, after Tuesday the world may be one step closer to finding out what lay behind the murder – a British citizen killed on British soil.

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