Alexander Litvinenko
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Born | Voronezh |
Russia | |
Assassinated | Bloomsbury, London, United Kingdom |
Spouse | Marina Litvinenko |
Nataliya Litvinenko | |
Children | Anatoly Litvinenko |
Sonia Litvinenko | |
Alexander Litvinenko | |
Job | Actor |
Journalist | |
Books | Blowing Up Russia: The Secret Plot to Bring Back KGB Terror (Large Print 16pt) |
Lubyanka Criminal Group | |
Blowing up Russia: Vladimir Putin's Fake News | |
Died | Bloomsbury |
London | |
United Kingdom | |
Place of burial | Highgate Cemetery, London, United Kingdom |
Movies/Shows | Poisoned by Polonium |
Assassination of Russia | |
Parents | Valter Litvinenko |
Nina Belyavskaya | |
Date of birth | January 1,1962 |
Full name | Aleksandr Valterovich Litvinenko |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 460875 |
Alexander Litvinenko Life story
Alexander Valterovich "Sasha" Litvinenko was a British-naturalised Russian defector and former officer of the Russian Federal Security Service who specialised in tackling organised crime. A prominent critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, he advised British intelligence and coined the term "mafia state".
Yevgeny Prigozhin: Was the Wagner chief a dead man walking?
... The former Russian intelligence officer-turned defector, Alexander Litvinenko, died a slow and agonising death in a London hospital in 2006 after he was poisoned with radioactive Polonium-210...
Suspected Russian spies held in major UK security investigation
... In 2006, former Russian-intelligence officer Alexander Litvinenko was after being poisoned by assassins working for the Russian state...
Suspected Russian spy arrested at Gatwick Airport
... Russia and Britain have had a difficult relationship for years, hitting low points with the fatal 2006 poisoning of former Russian security officer Alexander Litvinenko in London and the attempted killing of former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter with a nerve agent in Salisbury in 2018...
Russian man accused of Alexander Litvinenko killing dies of Covid-19
...One of the main suspects in the murder of the former Russian spy and Kremlin critic, Alexander Litvinenko, has died of Covid-19...
Ukraine: Putin's miscalculations could see him strike harder
... He is thought to have signed off on the use of radioactive polonium to murder the former KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko in London in 2006...
The blogger, hits back against a hammer-wielding Russian ‘assassin'
...Sergei Skripal was poisoned was killed with the nerve Novichok agent Alexander Litvinenko with radioactive polonium...
Newspaper headlines: Andrew Neil challenges PM to 'oven-ready' interview
... From Alexander Litvinenko in 2006 to the apparent strangling of an Aeroflot executive last year, a string of wealthy and fugitive Russians living in the UK , the Mirror says, have met grisly ends ...
US high-level spy inside Russia in the year 2017, extracts, reports say
... in 2006, Russian agents killed a former intelligence officer Alexander Litvinenko in central London by poisoning the tea with radioactive material, according to British researchers...
Newspaper headlines: Andrew Neil challenges PM to 'oven-ready' interview
Several of Friday's papers cover Andrew Neil 's appeal to Boris Johnson to agree to an interview with him.
"BBC challenges chicken PM" is the Daily Mirror 's take as it.
The Metro deploys a different animal metaphor, nicknaming Mr Neil. It describes his "on-air challenge" to Mr Johnson as "unprecedented. "
The Number of violent deaths in London this Year - 133 - has, The Daily Telegraph reports.
The "grim milestone" was passed yesterday, when A Man in his 20s was stabbed to death in Hackney, in The East of The City .
Last Year had itself been the deadliest Year for a decade, The Paper says.
Shadow chancellor John Mcdonnell has told the Financial Times That - in The Event of a hung Parliament - or make any deals.
Instead, it would seek to form a minority government and challenge other parties to "Make Up their minds" on each policy.
"Let's see if the Lib Dems vote against the Real Living wage at £10 an hour," he tells The Paper .
The FT's lead story focuses on the, the country's state-owned oil firm, in its initial public offering.
It is a record amount, The Paper says, eclipsing the record set by the Chinese e-commerce firm Alibaba.
But it gives The Company an overall valuation well short of the $2tn craved by Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman.
The Times is among the papers to cover the death of Dmitry Obretetsky - a Russian tycoon who was as he walked back to his mock-Georgian mansion in Surrey.
Police are not treating it as a hit-and-run and no arrests have been made.
But, as puts it, it's the latest example of death "stalking Russian oligarchs exiled in Britain".
From Alexander Litvinenko in 2006 to the apparent strangling of an Aeroflot executive last Year , a "string of wealthy and fugitive Russians living in the UK", The Mirror says, "have met grisly ends".
A friend of Mr Obretetsky has suggested to Russian media That he was "targeted".
So, there are fears he was killed on President Putin's orders. "Was it Vladdy murder?" The Paper asks.
Libraries shutting downAlmost 800 public libraries, according to figures published in The Guardian - a reduction of around a fifth.
Since the start of the Tory government's austerity drive, The Paper says, The Number of library visits has fallen too, from 315 to 226 million.
It points out That Boris Johnson told the BBC last weekend some local authorities, including his own, have been able to "manage their finances so as to open new libraries".
If getting to a library is proving harder, then perhaps those interested in a challenging read could instead head to Muse restaurant in Central London .
The Daily Mail says it offers what could be.
Costing £145, each of the 10 courses are accompanied by what The Chef calls a "gastronomic autobiography", referencing for example a Childhood Memory of a tree.
The problem, the Mail, says is That the "flowery text" gives diners only the "vaguest hints" about "what you'll actually be Eating . ".
Source of news: bbc.com