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Russian spy Alex Litvinenko converted to Islam

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Thierry.   

Litvinenko Investigation Widens To Russia, U.S.

 

Radiation experts outside Litvinenko's home in London

(epa)

PRAGUE, December 4, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- British investigators traveled today to Moscow to search for clues in the apparent murder of Russian ex-intelligence officer Aleksandr Litvinenko. The case has also lead a second police contingent to the United States.

 

 

The police officials in Moscow plan to interview three men who may have information about Litvinenko, who died November 23 after ingesting the rare radioactive isotope polonium-210.

 

The men -- Andrei Lugovoi, Dmitry Kovtun, and Vyacheslav Sokolenko -- met with Litvinenko in a London hotel on November 1, the day he fell ill. All three have protested their innocence, and say they are being framed.

 

Official Cooperation

 

British Home Secretary John Reid, speaking ahead of an EU interior ministers meeting in Brussels, says he is confident of Moscow's assistance in the case. Chechen separatist envoy Akhmed Zakayev told RFE/RL that Litvinenko asked him about the possibility of converting to Islam in the early days of his illness.

MORE: Coverage in Russian from RFE/RL's Russian Service.

 

 

"The British police will be going to Russia to continue their inquiries and will continue to go wherever the evidence leads," said Reid. "This investigation will proceed as normal, whatever the diplomatic or whatever the wider considerations."

 

Newspaper reports say a separate contingent of Scotland Yard investigators was in the United States last week to question a former KGB agent with ties to both Litvinenko and Litvinenko's London ally, exiled Russian billionaire Boris Berezovsky.

 

The man, Yury Shvets, told the Associated Press he had given the British officers the name of the person he believes is behind Litvinenko's death. He declined to elaborate.

 

Following Trails

 

The widening investigation follows revelations last week that radioactive traces had been found on airplanes that traveled between London and Moscow, as well as to a dozen other European cities during the month of November.

 

Mario Scaramella in 2004 (epa)A fourth man who met Litvinenko on the day of his apparent poisoning has also been found to have ingested a significant amount of polonium-210.

 

Mario Scaramella, an Italian academic and security consultant, is currently in London's University College Hospital. He claims to have "five times" the deadly dose of the radioactive substance in his body, although doctors say he remains well.

 

British officials have raced to counter growing public fear as traces of radioactivity have been detected in a dozen London locations and on board aircraft.

 

Home Secretary Reid today tried to assuage EU concerns about public safety, saying, "I'm very glad to have the opportunity to be here to inform my European colleagues of developments on the case of Mr. Litvinenko and hopefully to reassure them as well so that they're aware that any health threat is absolutely minimal."

 

No Easy Answers

 

Investigators appear no closer to resolving the Litvinenko case. In the absence of a clear resolution, multiple theories have developed to explain what may be behind the mysterious death of the former security-service agent.

 

Litvinenko's friends and family say his death was a vendetta carried out by the Kremlin.

 

The 43-year-old Litvinenko had lived in England since 2000, and was a fierce critic of the Russian government. He had accused the Kremlin of involvement in a number of terrorist-style bombings, assassinations, and murder attempts.

 

Litvinenko wrote a deathbed letter claiming his poisoning was the work of Russian President Vladimir Putin, whom he described as "barbaric and ruthless."

 

Putin has reportedly criticized the British government for allowing the contents of the letter to be made public. He has denied any Kremlin involvement in Litvinenko's death, saying the plot is the work of anti-Russian forces in the West.

 

Russian officials have also criticized British authorities for refusing to reveal the results of Litvinenko's autopsy, conducted on December 1. The findings are expected this week.

 

Religious Conversion

 

The date of Litvinenko's funeral has also not been disclosed. Friends say the casket will be sealed to prevent the spread of radiation.

 

Litvinenko's father today told RFE/RL's Russian Service that his son told him shortly before his death that had converted to Islam, and wished to be buried according to Muslim tradition.

Akhmed Zakayev (CTK file photo)"I said, 'Sasha, it's your decision. As long as you don't become a communist or a satanist, that's the main thing. I'm a Christian myself, but I have a granddaughter whose father is Kabardin -- my daughter's husband, he's Muslim as well," he continued. "We haven't lost God; we believe in God. But how to believe in God, how to pray -- everyone should do that in the way they consider best."

 

Valter Litvinenko said his son had grown disenchanted with what he described as the "hierarchy" of the Russian Orthodox Church, and had sought a change.

 

Akhmed Zakayev, the London-exiled Chechen separatist envoy, told RFE/RL that Litvinenko asked him about the possibility of converting in the early days of his illness. "I told him it was a purely personal question, that it isn't important to which god we pray as long as we aren't doing ignoble acts. And I sort of dropped it. But he over and over again returned to the subject."

 

Zakayev added that Litvinenko went on to pronounce the shahadah, the fundamental Muslim statement of faith.

 

"Any student of Islam will tell you that there are no particular rituals for converting to Islam. All you have to do is say one sura" -- a verse or chapter from the Koran -- "and from that moment if the person who pronounces this sura, this shahadah, has sincere intentions, from that moment he is considered a Muslim," he said.

 

Zakayev also described the day before Litvinenko died: "On November 22, at his request, I, with his wife's approval, brought an imam to him. He read over him a sura from the Koran, the one that is read over a dying Muslim," he said. "Of course, according to Muslim rituals, they pray over the body before burial. Now, unfortunately, that part of the process which Aleksandr requested cannot be fulfilled because of the exceptional circumstances of the radiation in his body and the fact that the coffin that will contain his body cannot be opened for 6 1/2 years."

 

(with agency reports)

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Sophist   

Alaah ha unaxariisto--- This was mentioned to me by a mate who works in the media 4 days ago; I thought he was making it up

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AYOUB   

Ex-spy buried amid further twists

The funeral of the poisoned Russian former spy Alexander Litvinenko was held as it was claimed that a key witness in the murder inquiry had fallen into a coma.

The former spy was laid to rest on Thursday afternoon at Highgate Cemetery in north London.

However, the burial service was overshadowed by an unscheduled interruption by an Islamic imam - specifically against the wishes of Mr Litvinenko's widow. The burial service was supposed to be a strictly non-denominational ceremony

After Mr Litvinenko's father had spoken at his graveside, an Islamic associate of his Chechen friend Ahmed Zakayev interrupted and performed a Muslim prayer. Alex Goldfarb, one of the former spy's closest friends, described it as an unfortunate detraction and said it was yet another thing Mr Litvinenko's wife Marina had had to deal with.

It followed controversy over whether Mr Litvinenko had converted to Islam on his deathbed. Mr Litvinenko's father Walter said earlier this week that his son had requested before his death to be buried according to Muslim tradition. However, his closest friends say they have "strong reservations" about this.

In another development, it was disclosed that all seven staff who were working at the Pine Bar of the Millennium Hotel - where Mr Litvinenko had a meeting on the day he fell ill - had tested positive for low levels of radiation.

Prof Pat Troop, chief executive of the Health Protection Agency (HPA), said there were no short-term risks, but there was a "very small" increased long-term risk of cancer. Following the results, the HPA will offer urine tests to more than 200 other people who were in the bar on that day, November 1, which is when Mr Litvinenko was first taken ill.

It has also been claimed that the Russian businessman Dmitry Kovtun, who met the former spy on the day he was allegedly poisoned in London, is critically ill.

A Russian news agency claimed Mr Kovtun had fallen into a coma immediately after being questioned by Russian investigators and Scotland Yard detectives.

Mr Kovtun is said to have met Mr Litvinenko at the Millennium Hotel in Grosvenor Square on November 1 together with his business associate Andrei Lugovoi, another key witness in the case. Earlier, Russian prosecutors released a statement saying that Kovtun had "developed an illness also connected with the radioactive nuclide (substance)".

 

http://www.ananova.com/news/story/

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Janna   

Interesting story to follow up. A man spokes badly of the Russian government, of course they would take your life for it.

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Modesty   

Even when I thought he wasn't muslim, i sympathized with him.No one should like that way, it's really sad. I remember I was thinking why if he says shahada before he dies, and alhamdulilah he died muslim. May Allah grant him peace, and his family , ameen.

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Ameen   

Deep and meaningful articles and it is an amazing event for the Muslims of the world to wake up and realize we can be next on the list so lets not take our deen for granted (inshallah). Allah is in no need of us, whereas we are in great need of Him, the Mighty,the Great.

And Allah knows best.

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