Lugovoy to run in Russia parliament vote
By Guy Faulconbridge
MOSCOW (Reuters) - The Russian man wanted by Britain on suspicion of killing Alexander Litvinenko said on Sunday he would stand for election to the Russian parliament, in a move that could grant him immunity from future prosecution.
Andrei Lugovoy, a former KGB security service officer, said he would run in the December parliamentary election as a candidate from the Liberal Democratic Party (LDPR), which is headed by ultra-nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky.
"I will participate tomorrow in the Liberal Democratic Party conference," Lugovoy told Reuters by telephone. LDPR is due to hold a party conference on Monday to approve its candidate list.
"I intend to stand for election as a member of the LDPR party list," Lugovoy said.
Zhirinovsky said in a television interview on Saturday that Lugovoy would be a leading candidate from his party.
British prosecutors want to extradite Lugovoy from Russia to face trial in London for the murder of Litvinenko, who died in a London hospital on November 23 after receiving a dose of radioactive polonium-210, a rare and highly toxic isotope.
Lugovoy has always protested his innocence and says he has been caught up in a deadly game of international intrigue that Britain is trying to manipulate to damage Russian interests.
He has said Britain's Secret Intelligence Service (SIS) and Russian billionaire Boris Berezovsky, Lugovoy's former employer, are more likely suspects. Berezovsky, who lives in London, has dismissed those allegations. Continued...



