Andrei Lugovoi , a former KGB spy accused of murdering the
Russian dissident Alexander Litvinenko made a surprise public announcement in
which he stated his wish to candidate for the Kremlin-supporting ultra-nationalist
Liberal Democratic party.
This new path he has chosen in a political career has
already begun to take shape, as the party confirmed it had placed him second on
its party list, a move that virtually guarantees him a seat as an MP.
The Russian election for parliament begins in December.
As future member of the Russians Duma, lower house, Lugovoi
will be given diplomatic immunity along with prosecution invulnerability. This
makes no change in the United
Kingdom’s request to extradite Lugovoi, as
the Kremlin had no intention of doing so in the first place.
Britain
is now faced with the possibility of Lugovoi presenting himself in parliament
as a heroic and patriotic Russian battling the mischievous British spies. Britain is convinced that his
entering parliament could not have been accomplished without help from the Kremlin.
On Sunday, the Liberal Democratic party's leader, Vladimir Zhirinovsky,
cleaned Lugovoi’s slate of crimes and
described Britain’s
charges against him as "an attempt to organize provocations against our
citizens."
Lugovoi is suspected of persuading
Litvinenko to sip a cup of poisoned tea at a London hotel. Litvinenko ingested a large
dose of radioactive polonium-210 and died three weeks later. In a deathbed statement,
he accused Vladimir Putin of organizing his murder, a murder with which the
Kremlin denies of having anything to do with.
|