Another dead Russian in Great Britain was critical of Putin

British anti-terror investigators are investigating the mysterious death of another Russia, this time in London. It's Nikolai Gluskov, friend of a known Russian oligarch and deceased in London, who was known as a critic of Russian President Putin. A 68-year-old Russian has been found dead under unexplainable circumstances [...]
British anti-terror investigators are investigating the mysterious death of another Russia, this time in London. It's Nikolai Gluskov, friend of a known Russian oligarch and deceased in London, who was known as a critic of Russian President Putin.
A 68-year-old Russian has been found dead under unexplainable circumstances in London, while his death is being investigated by British anti-terror investigators. The media says it's Nikolai Gloskov, a friend of a popular anti-Putin oligarch, Boris Berezovski, who was found hanging in London in 2013.
The death of the exiled Russian occurs a week after the nervous gas attack on a double agent, Sergei Scripal, which has led to the lowest levels of relations between London and Moscow. According to British police, the death of the Russian dissident is being treated as “inexplicable” while the anti-terror is involved in the death investigation.
Sixty-eight-year-old Russian Nikolay Gloskov was sentenced to prison in absentia in Russia on charges of abuse of 87 million pounds at the time he led the Russian airline Aeroflower. British police have decided to investigate 14 cases of deaths of Russian citizens, following the nervous gas attack on a former double agent several days ago in the English city of Salisbury.
Meanwhile Tuesday midnight, the deadline set by British Prime Minister Theresa May expires for Russian response to the presence of a Russian nervous agent in the attack on British territory. The British prime minister is expected today to speak with US President Donald Trump on the issue, which has led British-Russian relations to the lowest and most dangerous point for a long time.
Theresa May is expected to speak to the British Parliament on Wednesday for responding to the British event in the event Moscow does not provide sufficient explanation for the event, which Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has named a “gipur”.











