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The Litvinenko Inquiry

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Part 3 | Chapters 1 to 5 | Alexander <strong>Litvinenko</strong><br />

“there was always, if I may say, a distinct difference between Marina who had<br />

clearly taken on board the English language and had progressed very quickly and<br />

Sasha, I think, took a little bit longer.” 90<br />

It appears from the evidence of other witnesses, for example Tim Reilly and Alexander<br />

Tabunov, that even in 2006 Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> was still in the habit of seeking out Russian<br />

speakers in order to talk in his mother tongue. And when Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> was interviewed<br />

by the Metropolitan Police Service when he was in hospital after the poisoning, it was<br />

necessary for him to be assisted by an interpreter.<br />

3.106 Anatoly <strong>Litvinenko</strong> started school in London in 2001. Marina <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s evidence<br />

was that his school fees were met by Mr Berezovsky, although she added that there<br />

was a reduction in these payments after 2003. 91<br />

Close friends<br />

3.107 Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> had a number of friends and associates in London, including some,<br />

such as Mr Berezovsky and Mr Goldfarb, who have already featured in this narrative.<br />

I will refer to others in due course.<br />

3.108 At this stage, I propose simply to introduce two men with whom Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong><br />

developed particularly strong friendships during this period.<br />

3.109 <strong>The</strong> first of these men was Vladimir Bukovsky. Mr Bukovsky, who came to give evidence<br />

to the <strong>Inquiry</strong>, was a Russian dissident who had spent many years in detention in<br />

Soviet Russia before being released to the West in 1976 in exchange for the general<br />

secretary of the Chilean Communist Party. It seems that either Mr Goldfarb or<br />

Mr Berezovsky put Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> in touch with Mr Bukovsky shortly after the family’s<br />

arrival in the UK. <strong>The</strong> evidence from both Marina <strong>Litvinenko</strong> and Mr Bukovsky himself<br />

was that, thereafter, the two developed a very strong friendship. Mrs <strong>Litvinenko</strong><br />

described Mr Bukovsky as Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s “guru”, and the “greatest contact” that he<br />

had. 92 Mr Bukovsky said that he talked to Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> about the history of KGB<br />

repression during the twentieth century, of which Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> had previously been<br />

unaware. He said that Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> would sometimes telephone him “20, 30 times<br />

a day, including the night time” and that Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> also travelled to see him at<br />

his home. 93 It is clear to me that Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s discussions with Mr Bukovsky were<br />

highly influential in the development of his political views.<br />

3.110 <strong>The</strong> second of Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s very close friends was Akhmed Zakayev. Mr Zakayev<br />

arrived in London in 2002 and claimed asylum. Like Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>, he was supported<br />

by Mr Berezovsky. Mr Zakayev was introduced to Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong> by Mr Berezovsky,<br />

and Mr Zakayev subsequently chose to live with his family in a house very close to the<br />

<strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s house in Muswell Hill. As Mr Zakayev put it in evidence, “Chechen people<br />

first choose the neighbour and then they buy the house. That’s exactly what I did.”<br />

He said that the two families became “very, very big friends, very close friends”, who<br />

would see each other almost every day. 94 Again, it is clear to me that his friendship with<br />

Mr Zakayev was an important influence on Mr <strong>Litvinenko</strong>’s life in the years between<br />

2002 and 2006. It was during this period, and no doubt a result of this friendship, that<br />

90<br />

Attew 13/15-16<br />

91<br />

Marina <strong>Litvinenko</strong> 3/119-120<br />

92<br />

Marina <strong>Litvinenko</strong> 3/142-143<br />

93<br />

Bukovsky 26/87-88; 26/92-93<br />

94<br />

Zakayev 26/143<br />

31

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