MOSCOW - Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Monday
the Litvinenko poisoning case was hurting ties with Britain, which sent
detectives to Moscow as part of the investigation into the ex-KGB spy's death.
A car approaches
terminal II of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport, December 2, 2006.
[Reuters]
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Lavrov said
insinuations in Britain of high-level Russian involvement in Alexander
Litvinenko's death were "unacceptable," adding: "It is of course damaging our
relations."
British police officers flew to Russia to widen their probe
into the death of Litvinenko, who died in a London hospital on November 23 from
a lethal dose of radioactive polonium 210.
Both Russia and Britain believe Litvinenko's death should not
be politicized, Lavrov added. "If there are any questions, they should be put
through law enforcement agencies," Interfax quoted him as saying.
In Brussels, British Home Secretary John Reid said Moscow has
"assured us we'll get all the cooperation necessary."
Associates of Litvinenko have alleged either Kremlin
involvement in his killing or that rogue elements in Russia's state security
service were responsible.
Before he died, Litvinenko, a former Russian state security
service agent who became one of President Vladimir Putin's sharpest critics in
the London-based Russian emigre community, accused Putin of ordering his
death.
The Kremlin has denied any role in the killing, and Kremlin
opponents also find the theory of Putin's involvement improbable, noting such a
high-profile killing on foreign soil could only damage him.
RADIATION CHECKS
British detectives are likely to try to interview Russian
citizens who met Litvinenko at London's Millennium Hotel on November 1, the day
he fell ill.
Andrei Lugovoy, a former KGB agent, says he and businessman
Dmitry Kovtun met Litvinenko that day at the hotel. But Lugovoy, now back in
Moscow, says they discussed a business opportunity and denies anything to do
with an attempt on Litvinenko's life.
Alex Goldfarb, a London-based friend of Litvinenko, said the
British investigators should see another ex-KGB agent, Mikhail Trepashkin, who
had what he called "substantive information."
Trepashkin, serving a four-year sentence in an Urals prison for
divulging state secrets, said in a letter last Friday that the FSB, the Russian
state security service, had created a hit squad to kill Litvinenko and other
enemies of the Kremlin.
Britain's Health Protection Agency said on Monday two more
hotels in central London had been checked for radiation. Several other locations
in the capital and some aircraft have also been checked amid a public health
scare.
In addition, the Foreign Office said Britain's embassy in
Moscow would be tested for radiation as a precautionary measure in the next day
or two.
Among the other London locations caught up in the probe was the
Parkes Hotel in upmarket Knightsbridge. The Sunday Times newspaper said this was
where Lugovoy stayed when he visited London on his first of three trips in
October.
The agency has so far tested 99 urine samples.
"The only urine sample that the agency has examined that has
shown higher levels of polonium 210, relates to an adult family member (of
Litvinenko)," it said.