Berlusconi has denied ever having met or heard of Scaramella.
Nature has reportedly just published an article inquiring into the death of Litvinenko. A quick check on internet shows that it is not yet on line.
Data from survivors of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs, as well as from nuclear accidents, suggest that a dose of more than 15 sieverts kills within days, as the radiation destroys gut tissue. People exposed to less than 5 Sv usually live for longer than three weeks and may even survive the initial poisoning. A dose within the range of 5-15 Sv is equivalent to the amount of radiation received by someone standing within 800 metres of the Hiroshima bomb. If ingested, perhaps as little as one ten-millionth of a gram of polonium-210 could deliver this dose. Estimates on the lethal dose vary widely. ...Police are still investigating, but it is possible that Litvinenko spread tiny amounts of polonium-210 after being poisoned. The substance could have come out in his sweat or tears, for example. Theories about the planes that have been grounded after finding hints of radiation on board are even more speculative. Authorities have not said what level of radiation has been detected or even whether the source is polonium-210. If polonium-210 is found to be the source, further questions need to be answered. The substance decays by emitting alpha particles, which can be stopped by something as flimsy as a sheet of paper. If the polonium-210 was brought from Russia, as many observers have speculated, contamination could easily have been prevented by simply keeping it in a tightly sealed bottle.
If ingested, perhaps as little as one ten-millionth of a gram of polonium-210 could deliver this dose. Estimates on the lethal dose vary widely.
...Police are still investigating, but it is possible that Litvinenko spread tiny amounts of polonium-210 after being poisoned. The substance could have come out in his sweat or tears, for example.
Theories about the planes that have been grounded after finding hints of radiation on board are even more speculative. Authorities have not said what level of radiation has been detected or even whether the source is polonium-210.
If polonium-210 is found to be the source, further questions need to be answered. The substance decays by emitting alpha particles, which can be stopped by something as flimsy as a sheet of paper. If the polonium-210 was brought from Russia, as many observers have speculated, contamination could easily have been prevented by simply keeping it in a tightly sealed bottle.
Italian emerges as an odd footnote in Litvinenko case (IHT)
He has claimed to be a professor at the University of Naples, which in turn claims never to have heard of him. He was caught on a tape bragging that Silvio Berlusconi, the former Italian prime minister, was considering him for a top job at the United Nations. He later had to admit that he never even met Berlusconi. And so, a slew of media reports about him and his career here -- which included trying to prove that some top Italian center-left politicians, including Prime Minister Romano Prodi, are Russian spies -- have invariably included unflattering adjectives. They include: "incurable liar," "wannabe 007," "braggart," "bumbler" and "swindler" -- not to mention "fool" and "mental case." Those last two descriptions come from Oleg Gordievski, the highest- ranking known KGB defector, who has known Scaramella for years. His opinion of Scaramella is so low that he could not even consider him as a suspect in Litvinenko's poisoning, even after Litvinenko himself raised the possibility in a conversation with Gordievski. "I said, 'Who poisoned you? Who did you have a meal with?'" Gordievski recalled in a telephone interview Friday. "He said, 'I had a meal with Scaramella. He was very nervous. He was very strange, but he is always strange.'" "I said, 'Sasha, it could not be Scaramella because he has nothing to do with the KGB business,'" Gordievski said. He concluded: "He is just a soap bubble. He doesn't know anything."
And so, a slew of media reports about him and his career here -- which included trying to prove that some top Italian center-left politicians, including Prime Minister Romano Prodi, are Russian spies -- have invariably included unflattering adjectives. They include: "incurable liar," "wannabe 007," "braggart," "bumbler" and "swindler" -- not to mention "fool" and "mental case."
Those last two descriptions come from Oleg Gordievski, the highest- ranking known KGB defector, who has known Scaramella for years. His opinion of Scaramella is so low that he could not even consider him as a suspect in Litvinenko's poisoning, even after Litvinenko himself raised the possibility in a conversation with Gordievski.
"I said, 'Who poisoned you? Who did you have a meal with?'" Gordievski recalled in a telephone interview Friday. "He said, 'I had a meal with Scaramella. He was very nervous. He was very strange, but he is always strange.'"
"I said, 'Sasha, it could not be Scaramella because he has nothing to do with the KGB business,'" Gordievski said.
He concluded: "He is just a soap bubble. He doesn't know anything."
The interest in Prodi appears to have been the major tie between Scaramella and Litvinenko. Both Litvinenko and Gordievski have recounted in interviews Scaramella's deep interest in proving that Prodi was a KGB agent. Accounts differ. But Gordievski said Friday that he was present when Litvinenko, who moved to Britain in 2000, recounted for members of the U.K. Independence Party a conversation with a sympathetic Russian general where to go if he defected. "He said, 'I was speaking to the deputy head of the KGB, General Such- and-Such,'" Gordievski recalled. "And he told me, 'If you intend to go to the West, don't go to Italy because it is full of our agents.'" And he said, 'For example, Prodi is our man.'" The transcripts between Scaramella and Guzzanti show a particular interest in this conversation, and Scaramella repeatedly pressed Gordievski and Litvinenko for any further information. Gordievski said he told Scaramella that he never heard anything about Prodi and the KGB -- but that Scaramella later said in an e-mail message that Gordievski had, in fact, confirmed a link. "I nearly fell from my chair," he said. "He wrote it in that stupid e-mail to me. I didn't write it. He wrote it as mental aberration in him." In a 2005 interview with La Repubblica, an Italian daily newspaper, Litvinenko recounted how he had traveled to Naples in 2004 to give a deposition to the commission, taken by Scaramella, on KGB activity in Italy. "I said to Mario I had never heard Prodi spoken of," Litvenenko told La Repubblica. At the end of several days of interviews, on a balcony overlooking the sea, Litvenenko said that Scaramella put in his hand some stationery from his private business and several hundred euros. "I felt humiliated," he told the newspaper. "I told him he was mistaken if he thought Colonel Litvinenko was reduced to selling his information."
"He said, 'I was speaking to the deputy head of the KGB, General Such- and-Such,'" Gordievski recalled. "And he told me, 'If you intend to go to the West, don't go to Italy because it is full of our agents.'" And he said, 'For example, Prodi is our man.'"
The transcripts between Scaramella and Guzzanti show a particular interest in this conversation, and Scaramella repeatedly pressed Gordievski and Litvinenko for any further information.
Gordievski said he told Scaramella that he never heard anything about Prodi and the KGB -- but that Scaramella later said in an e-mail message that Gordievski had, in fact, confirmed a link.
"I nearly fell from my chair," he said. "He wrote it in that stupid e-mail to me. I didn't write it. He wrote it as mental aberration in him."
In a 2005 interview with La Repubblica, an Italian daily newspaper, Litvinenko recounted how he had traveled to Naples in 2004 to give a deposition to the commission, taken by Scaramella, on KGB activity in Italy.
"I said to Mario I had never heard Prodi spoken of," Litvenenko told La Repubblica.
At the end of several days of interviews, on a balcony overlooking the sea, Litvenenko said that Scaramella put in his hand some stationery from his private business and several hundred euros.
"I felt humiliated," he told the newspaper. "I told him he was mistaken if he thought Colonel Litvinenko was reduced to selling his information."
Gordievskij was outraged and sat in silence. He believes Litvinenko finally caved into Scaramella's badgering because of his financial problems.
I am finishing the entire translation of the Gordievskij interview and will put it up today. In the meantime Bukovskij has also released an interview to Bonini and D'Avanzo.
Further there appears to be a tenuous trail through Venice that could be of interest to the investigation into the murder of Litvinenko.