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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Radiation is found at our Moscow embassy
2006-12-07
Radiation has been found at the British Embassy in Moscow, it emerged yesterday. On Monday, officials said a room there would be tested as a precaution after former KGB bodyguard Andrei Lugovoi went there to deny involvement in poisoning Alexander Litvinenko.

Mr Lugovoi and another Russian businessman reportedly met former spy Mr Litvinenko at the Millennium Hotel in Grosvenor Square, Mayfair, on November 1, the day he was apparently poisoned.

A spokesman said: 'A team of experts have concluded a precautionary check of the British Embassy.

'They have found no danger to public health. Small traces of radiation were found below levels that present a risk to health. The embassy is working as normal. There is no cause for concern.'

The development came as the Italian academic who met Mr Litvinenko on the day he was allegedly poisoned was discharged from hospital. Mario Scaramella had been treated at University College Hospital in London after testing positive for polonium 210 - the same radioactive toxin that is thought to have killed 43-year-old Mr Litvinenko. A hospital spokesman said Mr Scaramella had been discharged and was showing no symptoms of radiation poisoning.
Posted by:anonymous5089

#2  Radiation is found at our Moscow embassy

Was there any sushi?
Posted by: xbalanke   2006-12-07 14:50  

#1  This almost sounds like disinformation. There is not only background radiation everywhere, but trace amounts of mildly radioactive things get everywhere.

It only matters when it is of the specific radioactive isotope. That means detecting radiation doesn't mean anything, unless it's a LOT of radiation, in which case the source is secondary. It means that a positive chemical test for that isotopic chemical is what matters.

Polonium is chemically similar to tellurium and bismuth.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2006-12-07 13:47  

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