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The Litvinenko Inquiry

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Part 3: Alexander <strong>Litvinenko</strong> – his life in<br />

Russia and the United Kingdom, his<br />

illness and death<br />

Chapter 1: In Russia<br />

3.1 I received detailed evidence regarding the history of Alexander <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s life in<br />

Russia before he left to travel to the United Kingdom (UK) with his family in November<br />

2000. Very little of this evidence was contentious and much is already in the public<br />

domain. For example, a detailed account of Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s life in Russia is to be<br />

found in Alex Goldfarb and Marina <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s book Death of a Dissident, and I am<br />

of course aware of other books that have been written about Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s life, such<br />

as Martin Sixsmith’s <strong>The</strong> <strong>Litvinenko</strong> File and Alan Cowell’s <strong>The</strong> Terminal Spy.<br />

3.2 Although many of these matters are well known, I have set them out here in outline<br />

as they are of considerable contextual significance to the questions that I have been<br />

charged with investigating. <strong>The</strong> events that took place during Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s life in<br />

Russia, and in particular the last years before he left, cast a long shadow over his<br />

life in the UK. Many of those who played a part in the events of the final weeks and<br />

months of Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s life in 2006 were old friends and adversaries from his days<br />

in Russia.<br />

Childhood<br />

3.3 Alexander <strong>Litvinenko</strong> was born on 4 December 1962 in the Russian city of Voronezh.<br />

His parents, Walter and Nina <strong>Litvinenko</strong>, divorced when he was very young, and it<br />

appears that his childhood, in consequence, was not easy. I heard that as a young<br />

child Alexander spent periods of time living with his father and his father’s parents in<br />

Nalchik in the North Caucasus, with his mother in Moscow and with an aunt in another<br />

city called Morozovsk. When he was about 12 he returned to Nalchik to live with<br />

his grandparents, with whom he spent the rest of his childhood. 1 Nalchik is located<br />

towards the south of the old USSR, in the foothills of the Caucasus Mountains. It is<br />

close to Chechnya. This region and its people would later play an important part in<br />

Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s life.<br />

3.4 Both Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s parents remarried. His mother had a daughter, Svetlana, with<br />

her new husband. Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s father, Walter, had three children with his new wife,<br />

of whom the youngest was a son named Maxim. 2 As we shall see, Maxim lived in Italy<br />

later in his life, where he spent some time with his older half-brother Alexander.<br />

3.5 Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> finished his schooling in 1980 at the age of 17. <strong>The</strong> evidence of Marina<br />

<strong>Litvinenko</strong> (who of course had not yet met Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> at that time) was that he<br />

applied to go to university, but did not get a place, 3 and decided instead to go to<br />

military college. He took that decision in part because he would have been required to<br />

undertake military service at some point in any event. However, she said that he was<br />

also influenced, even at that young age, by a desire to serve and defend his country.<br />

1<br />

Marina <strong>Litvinenko</strong> 3/19-20; INQ017734 (page 2 paragraph 6)<br />

2<br />

Marina <strong>Litvinenko</strong> 3/20-23<br />

3<br />

Marina <strong>Litvinenko</strong> 3/23-24<br />

13

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