Soldier4Christ
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« on: November 29, 2006, 07:10:10 PM » |
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Radiation found on planes after ex-spy's death British Airways contacts people who flew on jetliners where traces found
Officials found traces of radiation on two British Airways jets, and the airline appealed Wednesday to tens of thousands of passengers who flew to Moscow or other cities to come forward — the latest twist in the inquiry into the poisoning death of a former Russian spy.
The airline said the “risk to public health is low,” adding that it was in the process of contacting tens of thousands of passengers who flew on the jets.
Two planes at London’s Heathrow Airport tested positive for traces of radiation and a third jet was taken out of service in Moscow awaiting examination, British Airways said.
Natalia Remnyova, administrator at Domodedovo Airport, the Moscow airport used by British Airways, said she knew nothing of a plane grounded there. Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said he could not comment because he had no information about the matter.
The airline said it was contacted by the British government Tuesday night and told to ground the jets and to let investigators looking into the death of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko test them for radiation.
High doses of polonium-210 — a rare radioactive element usually made in specialized nuclear facilities — were found in Litvinenko’s body, and traces of radiation have been found at sites in London connected with the inquiry into his death.
It was not immediately clear how radioactive traces got on the British Airways planes.
Authorities refused to specify whether the substance detected on the jets was polonium-210.
All planes on London-Moscow route All three planes had been on the London-Moscow route, British Airways said. In the last three weeks, the planes had also traveled to routes across Europe including Barcelona, Frankfurt and Athens. Around 33,000 passengers had traveled on 221 flights on those planes, said Kate Gay, an airline spokeswoman.
“The airline is in the process of making contact with customers who have traveled on flights operated by these aircraft, which operate within Europe,” British Airways said in a statement.
“British Airways understands that from advice it has been given that the risk to public health is low,” the airline’s statement said.
The airline has published the flights affected on its Web site, and told customers on these flights to contact a special help-line set up by the British Health Ministry.
Litvinenko, a former colonel with Russia’s Federal Security Service — the successor agency to the KGB — had been a fierce critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin before his death from radiation poisoning on Nov. 23. From his deathbed, he blamed Putin for his poisoning. Putin has strongly denied the charge.
Britain’s Home Secretary John Reid, who chaired a meeting of COBRA, the government’s emergency committee, said that the tests on the planes were part of a wider scientific investigation into sites that could be linked to Litvinenko’s death.
Meanwhile, Italian security expert Mario Scaramella, who was one of the last people to meet with Litvinenko before the former spy fell ill, said tests cleared him of radioactive contamination.
Scaramella came from Rome and met Litvinenko at a sushi bar in London on Nov. 1 — the day the former intelligence agent first reported the symptoms.
“I am fine,” Scaramella told The Associated Press by telephone. “I am not contaminated and have not contaminated anybody else.”
Scaramella returned to London to undergo tests and talk with the police Tuesday. He said he is in security protection and refused to say where he was.
Hospital staff to be tested More than three dozen staff at the two hospitals that treated Litvinenko will be tested for radioactive contamination, Britain’s Health Protection Agency said.
The agency said 106 staff at Barnet General Hospital and University College Hospital had been assessed for possible exposure, and 49 would have their urine tested.
The mysterious death has clouded Anglo-Russian relations. Prime Minister Tony Blair said Tuesday that police were determined to find out who was responsible for Litvinenko’s death.
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