British police have found no radioactive traces in the body of
Georgian businessman and opposition politician Badri
Patarkatsishvili, according to a BBC report on Wednesday.
Georgian opposition
businessman Badri Patarkatsishvili speaks to media during a news
conference in Tbilisi in this March 13, 2003 (file photo).
Patarkatsishvili, who led and financed an election campaign against
President Mikhail Saakashvili, has died in London, one of his
election campaign team said on February 13, 2008.
"As the result of initial work by experts there is no suggestion
of anything radioactive involved," a police spokeswoman said.
It feared that Patarkatsishvili's death may be a repeat of
radioactive poisoning of former Russian KGB agent Alexander
Litvinenko in November 2006, said the report.
According to Patarkatsishvili's aides, he died of a heart attack
on Tuesday night in Surrey, southeast England.
His former business associate, exiled Russian tycoon Boris
Berezovsky, said he died at about 2300 GMT on Tuesday.
Berezovsky said he had seen him that day, and he was not ill but
had complained about his heart.
On Wednesday, British police launched an investigation into the
"suspicious" death of Georgian businessman and opposition
politician Badri Patarkatsishvili.
"Police were called to an address in Leatherhead in Surrey late
yesterday evening (around 2300 GMT) following the collapse and
death of a Georgian businessman, Badri Patarkatsishvili who is
believed to have been 52," British police said in a statement.
"As with all unexpected deaths it is being treated as
suspicious. A post-mortem will be held later today (Wednesday) to
establish the cause of death," it said.
Patarkatsishvili, who lived in self-imposed exile in Britain and
Israel, financed his own campaign in January's presidential
election, which was won by incumbent Mikhail Saakashvili, and he
has since been charged with plotting a coup in connection with
anti-government protests last year.
A supporter of the Rose Revolution which brought Saakashvili to
power in 2004, Patarkatsishvili later turned against the government
and began financing opposition parties.
The authorities accused him of offering a 100 million US dollars
bribe to a senior police official to help him overthrow the
government and seize the Georgian interior minister.
He denied the charge, saying he himself was being targeted in an
assassination plot.
(Xinhua News Agency February 14, 2008)