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Tuesday 22 July 2014

Alexander Litvinenko inquest: U-turn announced on public inquiry and senior MP says timing is 'quirky' in light of souring relations with Russia over MH17 tragedy

Comment:  A bit "quirky??" There's an understatement to bit them all.

And the propaganda machine is going into a frenzied spiral of desperation...

Since Russia has remained impeccably calm and measured with a recent searing indictment of US-NATO "evidence" presented at the UN recently, it seems that digging up the 2006 Alexander Litvineko case was in order. And now suddenly there's a full blown, public  inquiry! Yet, isn't it strange that such an imperative isn't in evidence for the raging child abuse which is currently infesting Westminster? 

A public inquiry on Litvinenko is deemed far more pressing...I wonder why?

This Russian intelligence operative died from radiation poisoning, an assassination that was blamed on Putin. However, evidence doesn't add up and it was far more likely yet another example of the kind of activity for which the MOSSAD has become famous: killing people and then pointing the finger at their designated geopolitical target.

Since they are now becoming so reckless they had better pray that in such a public inquiry the truth doesn't come out. Sometimes, the further one goes into the realm of lies the more likely it is that truth will surface when you least expect it...

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The Independent 

The Government has announced that a public inquiry will at last be held into the death of the former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko, who was poisoned with radioactive polonium-210 in London in 2006. 

Before he died in agony under armed police guard in University College Hospital, the former KGB officer blamed Vladimir Putin, the Russian President, for his death.

By converting a judge-led inquest into the incident into a public inquiry, the Home Secretary Theresa May will ensure that investigators can look into whether or not the Russian state was behind the murder.

It will be viewed as a calamitous decision by Mr Putin and his government, and comes at a time when relations between Russia and the West are strained by the downing of Malaysian passenger jet MH17 over eastern Ukraine.

Ms May confirmed today in a written statement to Parliament that a public inquiry will take over from the inquest, and that it will be chaired by Sir Robert Owen, the senior judge who had been acting as the inquest's coroner.

The Government has repeatedly resisted a full-blown public inquiry in the past, preferring to “wait and see” on the results of the inquest.

A High Court ruled in favour of Mr Litvinenko’s widow Marina in February, ordering the Home Secretary to reconsider her decision, after Sir Robert said he could not hold a “fair and fearless” investigation given the matters sensitive to national security involved. 

Read more

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For more on the background behind Litvenko assassination see: Litvinenko - By Way Of Deception Part 1


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