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Where is Marina Litvinenko now? Everything to think about Alexander Litvinenko’s significant other and family.
The European Court of common freedoms has decided that Russia was liable for the passing of the insight official and turncoat, Alexander Litvinenko. He died in 2006 and in the wake of 15 difficult years, the decision is at last here.
The previous FSB official was harmed and killed at a London inn. He was a British-killed turncoat who was filling in as a writer in the UK. According to reports, he was harmed with tea at an inn in London.
Marina Litvinenko is most popular for being the spouse of Alexander Litvinenko. The 59-year old was hitched to the previous FSB official when they were in Russia. They secured the bunch in 1994. The couple moved to the UK looking for haven in 2000 after Alexander was re-captured.
Starting at 2021, Marina Litvinenko is as of now situated in London. She functions as an extremist and runs the mission for the equity of her late spouse.
Plus, she is additionally a creator. Her book, Death of a Dissident has a couple thinks back of her better half. Marina Litvinenko had a child, Anatoly Litvinenko with her better half.
The family at present dwells in London. While Marina is openly exceptionally dynamic, Anatoly doesn’t prefer to be at the center of attention for long.
Marina did her best to deal with her better half’s killer. She ran various missions via web-based media, made petitions to sign and it is extraordinary to see that equity has been at last served.
Marina Litvinenko doesn’t have a Wikipedia biography at this point. In like manner, her total assets subtleties remain very unclear as well. We will refresh her monetary subtleties soon.
The European Court of Human Rights ruled that Russia was responsible for the 2006 killing of Alexander Litvinenko, who died after drinking tea laced with a rare toxin at a London hotel.https://t.co/gaVK8jUCXl
— The New York Times (@nytimes) September 21, 2021
Her better half, Alexander Litvinenko was a Russian FSB official who later went to the UK and functioned as an expert for British Intelligence. The previous insight official instituted the expression “mafia state.”
After his run in with the Russian government, Alexander composed a great deal of books that contained claimed demonstrations of psychological warfare by Russia and a ton of inside experiences on the Russian government.
Sadly, in 2006, he was harmed with polonium-210 blended in with tea at an inn in London. The careful examination discovered two suspects however the proof was not considerable. In 2021, the European Court of Human Rights decided that Russia was liable for his demise.
Alexander Litvinenko’s wife Marina misses mother she is unable to return to Russia to see
The wife of Alexander Litvinenko has told Sky News she is devastated she cannot return to Russia to see her family over fears for her safety.
Marina Litvinenko told Kay Burley she has not been back to her home country for 18 years and now is unable to see her mother face-to-face.
She fears that if she goes to Moscow she will be put in prison – or worse – and would never again see her UK-based son Anatoly, 33.
Her husband, a former Russian spy, died after being given radioactive polonium in tea in a hotel in 2006, and several friends of the couple, including Boris Berezovsky and Nikolay Glushkov, have also died in mysterious circumstances.
Her comments also come after the British government blamed the Russian state for poisoning another ex-spy, Sergei Skripal, and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury, using a nerve agent.
Mrs Litvinenko, tears welling in her eyes, said: “Every time I think about going, something happens, like what happened with Sergei Skripal, what happened to Nikolai Glushkov, or sometimes what happened inside of Russia, when innocent people are put in prison for posting on their Facebook.
“Sometimes I think that nothing will happen to me and when I come to Russia I will be so sad because I wasted my time – I could not see my mum for a long time, I couldn’t go the funeral of my father.
“You know it’s very difficult to understand what is right to do and what is not, because it’s all about people who I love and who I want to see.
“But I have my son here and I don’t think he would behave if something happened to me in Russia. I just try to keep a balance of what I need to do.”
She says she is no longer able to see her mother, who used to travel to the UK, because she is too fragile to leave Russia since the death of her father.
Her mother regularly implores her daughter not to be controversial and not to “say something illegal (in Russia)”, so Mrs Litvinenko will be safe to go to Moscow to see her.
Despite claims by British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson that Vladimir Putin was “overwhelmingly likely” to have ordered the attack on Mr Skripal and his daughter, Mrs Litvinenko was reluctant to lay the blame entirely at the Russian President’s door.
She said he is a “mouthpiece” for the “special people” at the top of Russian politics and society, uniting several “absolutely different groups”, and was now a “slave to (the) system” who does not live an “easy life”.
“This man represents the special people around him; it’s not just about Mr Putin. It’s more about representation of people who support him and his way,” she said.
“He couldn’t do anything himself, without this support. We know he represents the military – people from military office; people from security office; and some people from intelligence service office.
“He needs to deliver everything that these people want.”
Mr Putin’s re-election for another six years did not surprise her, she said, as the atmosphere inside Russia is the same as in the era of Josef Stalin – the brutal dictator who repressed the country for decades and is said to be responsible for the deaths of millions.
“When… people support Putin, (and) go… and vote for him, I… remember what happened to Russian people during Stalin era.
“It’s the same. They believed this guy. They believed he was the father of Russia. He (Stalin) killed so many people and life was so tough.
“And it makes me feel very nervous… because, when it was the Breshnev era, in the 70s, people were very cynical. They understood.
“But today, some of them are not cynical. They really believe Putin wants to protect them from (the) West and the West wants to destroy Russia.”
She said she would not be surprised if Mr Putin – who has already been President for 18 years – tries to change Russia’s constitution to allow him to remain in the post potentially permanently, in a similar way to a change enacted by China’s leader Xi Jinping, who has abolished a limit on terms in power.
Mrs Litvinenko said what was required in response to the poisonings of Mr Skripal and his daughter was for the British government to be “strong”.
She said the only course of action was punitive personal sanctions against people who have benefited from the way Russia has been run since the 1990s and who spend their wealth in Britain and Europe.
“When you talk about what are the better things to do, it’s all about money,” she said.