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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

Mighty Great Britain Kicks a little Rooskii Ass

The Associated Press reports that Britain has taken a hard line on the Russia's outrageous failure to support the administration of justice in the Litvinenko matter. Do you dare to imagine, dear reader, how crazed Russians would react if a British critic of Britain were murdered with radioactive poison on Russian soil, with the poison being spread all over creation and endangering thousands of Russians, and if the Kremlin then proclaimed it knew the killer and wanted him turned over and Britain refused to do so? Lugovi is now under house arrest inside Russia, unable to travel, and Russia is ever more the international pariah. As usual, it is Britain that assumes the leadership role in warning the world about the dangers of dictatorship in Europe. Jolly good show old boys!

Britain will expel four Russian diplomats over the Kremlin's refusal to extradite the key suspect in the murder of a former KGB agent fatally poisoned in London, the foreign secretary said Monday. David Miliband told Parliament he had taken the steps because the Kremlin had failed to properly respond to the "horrifying and lingering" death of Alexander Litvinenko. It was the first time since 1996 that Britain had used the sanction, which Russia vowed "will not go unanswered."

"The Russian government has failed to register either how seriously we treat this case or the seriousness of the issues involved, despite lobbying at the highest level and clear explanations of our need for a satisfactory response," Miliband told lawmakers at the House of Commons. Moscow has refused to extradite Andrei Lugovoi, a Russian businessman and former KGB agent, to stand trial in London over the killing. Lugovoi has been named by British prosecutors as the chief suspect in the case. Russia's formal rejection was received a week ago by Britain's Crown Prosecution Service, which in turn spurned a Russian offer to try Lugovoi in Russia. "The heinous crime of murder does require justice," Miliband said. "This response is proportional and it is clear at whom it is aimed."

In Moscow, Mikhail Kamynin, a spokesman for Russia's Foreign Ministry, said "the provocative actions conceived by the British authorities will not go unanswered and cannot fail to produce the most serious consequences for Russian-British relations as a whole." Kamynin said the expulsions were "a well-staged action to politicize the Litvinenko case" and claimed the British government was trying to justify its own refusal to extradite two prominent Kremlin opponents with asylum in Britain: tycoon Boris Berezovsky and Chechen separatist figure Akhmed Zakayev. Britain's Foreign Office declined to specify the rank or position of the four Russian diplomats to be expelled, who had yet to leave the country. "We have chosen to expel four particular diplomats in order to send a clear and proportionate signal about the seriousness of this case," Miliband said.

Litvinenko died Nov. 23 in a London hospital after ingesting radioactive polonium-210. In a deathbed statement, he accused Russian President Vladmir Putin of being behind his killing. The ex-security agent said he first felt ill after meeting Lugovoi and business partner Dmitry Kovtun at London's Millennium Hotel. A waiter who was working at the hotel said he believed a poison had been sprayed into a pot of green tea, according to a British newspaper report Sunday. Norberto Andrade told the Sunday Telegraph that when he later cleared the table, the tea looked more yellow than usual and became "thicker — it looked gooey." Miliband said Lugovoi had offered the tea to Litvinenko and that he later "suffered a horrifying and lingering death in front of his family. His murder put hundreds of others, residents and visitors, at risk of radiation contamination." Traces of polonium-210 were found at around a dozen other sites in London, including three hotels, a stadium, two planes and an office building. In Britain, 700 people were tested for polonium contamination and 670 were tested abroad — including Lugovoi. All were eventually released.

International agreements mean that Lugovoi could be extradited if he travels outside Russia, Miliband said. Miliband said London has suspended visa facilitation negotiations with Russia and is reviewing cooperation on a range of issues. Britain and Moscow had been working on a process to speed up the issuing of visas, but will halt cooperation, the Foreign Office said. Russian's ambassador to London met with Sir Peter Ricketts, a senior aide to Miliband, shortly before lawmakers were told of the expulsions. In March 1996, Moscow ordered out nine British diplomats, alleging that they were part of a spy ring. Britain expelled four Russians in response

6 comments:

Unknown said...

I find it interesting to note just how differently folks who actually live in Russia versus folks who live outside of Russia feel about the Kremlin and Putin. Very different indeed.

Keep up the good work Mr Putin!

La Russophobe said...

The German people felt differently about Hitler, too, and many people today (they're called "skinheads") praise his work.

Anonymous said...

Try reading Anna Politkovskaya's book 'Putin's Russia'. It sets out exactly why Putin and the Kremlin are relatively popular at home...

Aris Katsaris said...

I find it interesting to note just how differently folks who actually live in Russia versus folks who live outside of Russia feel about the Kremlin and Putin

Yes, Timothy, that's the thing with aggressors and imperialists, that people in other countries don't like them very much. Does it really come as a revelation to you?

Now the people *inside* Russia -- (not counting those brave individuals like Anna Politkovskaya who have already paid the price of their dissent) you'll only learn to hate Putin when you see to what a dead-end his evil policies are leading you to.

Penny said...

Timothy, Russians have known very little in their existence but autocracy and dependency on the state. They've never eaten as well nor had as many trinkets as they do now. They've not as evolved as democratic individuals or as a civil society like we have in the west which you don't seem to be a part of either.

People like you, that would cheer on totalitarian behavior by Putin from the comfort of a democracy replete with laws to protect you, are the real creeps.

Wishing upon others that which you wouldn't want to endure makes you as disgusting as Putin.

Anonymous said...

LOL Timothy, it is very easy to control how people think when you control (mainly) what information they can access. Useful idiot if ever i saw one