Boris Berezovsky 'was killed by the BRITISH secret service who feared he would return to Russia and spill state secrets', claims Putin ally
- Kremlin insider Sergei Markov says Berezovsky was 'begging' to come home
- 'British secret services can be suspected in death of Berezovsky,' he said
- Berezovsky ordered drivers to speed while girls performed sex acts on him
- Police calling his death 'unexplained' while 'scarf is found next to his body'
- Experts fear he could have been murdered by the Kremlin in 'revenge' attack
- Others say he was 'destroyed' after losing £3bn court case with Abramovich
- Kremlin will not block any request for his body to be flown back to Russia
- In 24 hours before his death he was seen dressed all in black and 'shaking'
- Litvinenko's widow rules out suicide and says Berezovsky had 'enemies'
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Oligarch Boris Berezovsky may have been murdered by British spies from MI5 or MI6 to stop him leaking state secrets to the Russians, a leading supporter of Vladimir Putin argued today.
Fears in the West that the tycoon was planning to make peace with the president and end his 13-year UK exile may have led to him being assassinated, Kremlin insider Sergei Markov has said.
After falling out with Putin in 2000, the 67-year-old fled to Britain where he was later given political asylum.
But after losing a £3billion High Court battle with Roman Abramovich last year, Berezovsky is said to have 'begged' for Putin's forgiveness in a letter and asked if could could return home.
'It became clear that he was ready to give out all information to the Russian secret services on those Western secret services who are trying to work on throwing Putin down. So they got rid of him,' Sergei Markov said today.
Berezovsky's death is still 'unexplained' according to police after his body was discovered by a bodyguard on the bathroom floor of his mansion in Ascot, Berkshire, on Saturday.
He apparently left no note and sceptical friends are convinced he was murdered because 'suicide was not in his DNA'.
British involvement: A senior political figure
in Russia has claimed that MI5 or MI6 could have been involved in the
death of Boris Berezovsky, pictured with his former girlfriend Elena
Gorbunova
'Unfortunately, the British secret services can be suspected in the death of Berezovsky. And may be not only the British,' Markov said.
'There is no trust for the British secret services. After their participation in the plot aimed at occupying Iraq, their role in the plot targeting the leader of Libya, then the plot aimed at knocking down the government in Syria, it is clear that their methods are highly dirty.
'I think they may have guessed that Berezovsky would give away all information, and they decided to get rid of him,' he said.
Sergei Markov was an elected MP but is now a member of a presidential advisory body, the Public Chamber, and the deputy rector of the highly respected Plekhanov University of Economics in Moscow.
He denied that a Russian hit squad could have been sent to murder Berezovsky.
Thames Valley Police have told MailOnline that his body has now been removed from the house and a post mortem will be carried out this afternoon.
A cordon surrounding his multi-million pound house, the former home of TV and radio personality Chris Evans, will remain in place until at least Wednesday, a spokesman said.
Scene: A police car and a police tent are positioned insode the grounds of of late Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky today
Guard: A police van blocks a country lane leading to the oligarch's home this morning as officers comb his home for clues
Secluded: According to those close to the
investigation the oligarch left no suicide note at before he was found
dead inside a locked bathroom in his home (pictured), with a scarf lying
next to him
Police believe there was no 'third party' involvement in his death and a scarf was reportedly found next to Mr Berezovsky's corpse.
During his 12-year political exile in Britain, he was known to have led a colourful and controversial existence, but for the first time a darker and more depraved side to the tycoon can be revealed.
He would order his drivers to reach speeds of 140mph on motorways in his £420,000 armoured Maybach limousine as girls as young as 16 performed sexual acts on him in the back seat.
Claims: Berezovsky was said to have 'begged'
Vladimir Putin to let him return to Russia after they fell out in 2000,
and Kremlin insider Sergei Markov (right) has argued British spies may
have killed him to protect secrets
Close sources said it was an ‘open secret that he paid for sex with teenage girls at plush hotels and at his mansion’.
One, who had been flown from Riga in Latvia, asked to leave his home after one night because she did not like the way she had been treated.
He agreed but then told driver Mark Pendlebury, an ex-Paratrooper, to ‘ensure she missed her flight back to Riga’.
The chauffeur took her through notoriously congested routes in London to ensure she did not catch the plane.
When she realised she could not get home, the girl became tearful and was driven back to the mansion where she stayed for a further 24 hours.
‘Boris was very pleased and texted me a smiley face,’ the chauffeur said. ‘Such behaviour was accepted practice and not uncommon.
‘He seemed to have a steady supply of young girls from the same source. I felt very guilty about the way the girls were treated, particularly as most of them were the same age as my daughter.’
Broken: Boris Berezovsky sued former business
partner Roman Abramovich for billions of pounds but lost, which those
close to him claimed 'destroyed' him
Chauffeur Mark Pendlebury says he was told to make sure one of the girls missed her flight back to Riga
‘The patient and light-hearted way we handled his many guests made Boris’s life easier because the girls weren’t bored and complaining constantly.’
During the ‘white-knuckle rides’ on the motorway network, a security driver on a high-powered 800cc motorbike would drive ahead of the tycoon’s limousine to clear a path.
He would intimidate other motorists by driving close to their rear bumpers and keeping his full beam headlights on.
Mr Berezovsky was regularly driven from his home to his office in Mayfair or to meetings at hotels and restaurants.
Once in London, the convoy would allegedly drive at speeds of up to 70mph in 30mph zones, with a ‘no-holds bar attitude to law or safety’.
At one point Mr Pendlebury, 49, told his boss that ‘the greatest threat to Boris wasn’t the treat of assassination, but our driving’.
He said: ‘I admitted I enjoyed the breakneck speeds and the buzz of driving this way but said that “I’ve got children to worry about”.
‘The aggressive nature of driving like that all day and the long hours seriously affected our normal lives.’
Boris Berezovsky with his ex girlfriend Elena
and two children Arina (eight) and Gleb (six). The exiled 67-year-old
tycoon was found by his bodyguard at his estate in Ascot on Saturday
Police investigating the death of Mr Berezovsky
(pictured here in 2003), one of Vladimir Putin's fiercest opponents,
said there is so far no evidence to suggest any third party involvement
in his death
Mr Berezovsky was in a 15-year relationship with Elena Gorbunova, a Russian woman 21 years his junior, until last year.It is unclear if she was aware of the tycoon’s penchant for teenage prostitutes. Sources said he took great efforts to keep the seedy side of his life a secret to those close to him.
Meanwhile friends who saw him just before he died said he had been in a Park Lane hotel drinking tea, dressed in black, struggling to control a shaking hand and looking 'very depressed and lost'.
Witnesses described how he looked like a 'mourner' and had push his right hand against the table he sat at or against his body but continued to tremble.
Less than 24 hours later he was dead in his giant home, where he lived alone.
Mansion: Police descend on oligarch's multi-million pound home after his body was found
Firebrand ultra-nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky - founding leader of the hardline Liberal Democratic party - said he discussed a return to Russia with Berezovsky.
Zhirinovsky said Berezovskt 'looked very, very low, depressed, his eyes were bleak.
'Perhaps he felt that nothing was going right for him. He told me one thing that I was touched by, that he nearly cries when he watches Russian TV from Moscow.'
His ex-wife Galina arrived at the house when paramedics were there and has apparently told friends that he former husband was found with a scarf next to him, according to The Guardian.
Nikolai Glushkov, who had been one of his closest friends, said: 'Boris was strangled. Either he did it himself or with the help of someone. [But] I don't believe it was suicide. This was not just a normal death.'
His body could now be flown to Russia for burial after the Kremlin confirmed they would not oppose such a request by his family.
Police say they are trying to 'gain a better understanding' of what his life was like before he died.
Ascot neighbours today paint a picture of paranoia and secrecy behind the high fences surrounding his home.
One local man said that he was trimming his hedge when he was approached by bodyguards asking what he was doing in an area where a lot of exiled rich Russians live.
'They won't tell us the names of the Russians. They're hardly ever here. One of them only travels in by helicopter. They're all paranoid,' he said.
Road block: A forensic investigation unit on a lane close to the scene
Officers specially trained in nuclear materials are searching the house where the oligarch was found dead
Marina Litvinenko said: 'From my point of view it is not likely that he committed suicide.
'He had a lot of enemies. He was an outspoken person and never tried to hide what he thought.'
In an informal interview with a Russian journalist on the night before he died, Mr Berezovsky reportedly said: ‘My life no longer makes sense. I have no desire to take part in politics. I don’t know what I should do. I am 67 years old and I don’t know what I should do from now on.’
The journalist, Ilya Zhegulev, claims the tycoon was desperate to return to Russia and hated being in exile.
Meanwhile the mystery surrounding his death deepened last night after radiation experts spent hours combing the Berkshire mansion where his body was found.
A two-mile safety cordon was set up amid fears the exiled tycoon had been murdered with radioactive poisoning.
The alert had been raised when a paramedic’s radiation alarm was triggered as he left the £20million property after failing to revive Mr Berezovsky, whose body was discovered by a bodyguard on the bathroom floor.
There is currently no evidence to suggest anyone else was involved in the death of the 67-year-old businessman, police said.
Berezovsky last year lost a multibillion-pound High Court battle with Chelsea FC owner Roman Abramovich.
He was reportedly discovered in his bathroom after taking his own life.
Detective Chief Inspector Kevin Brown of Thames Valley Police said: 'It would be wrong to speculate on the cause of death until the post mortem has been carried out. We do not have any evidence at this stage to suggest third party involvement.'
Chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear trained officers searched his multi-million pound home
The exiled 67-year-old tycoon nicknamed the
'godfather of the Kremlin', is reported to have been found by his
bodyguard at his mansion
Others thought he had killed himself after becoming depressed over the loss of his wealth and status.
The controversial tycoon, who was once worth £3billion, was to be a key witness at the inquest of murdered spy Alexander Litvinenko, who was assassinated with radioactive poisoning in London six years ago.
Historian Yuri Felshtinsky, who has known Mr Berezovsky since 1998, said: ‘We do not have facts yet but we must bear in mind that there have been several questionable deaths of Russian emigres in the UK.
'It is more plausible to me that [Berezovsky] was killed as an act of revenge for speaking out against the Kremlin or perhaps as a warning to others not to cross them.'
The Kremlin admitted that earlier this year Putin received a begging letter from the tycoon, pleading for forgiveness.
'I made a lot of mistakes. I understand it may be hard to forgive me, but I got tangled here and I am begging (you) to forgive me,' it stated, according to a Russian TV programme.
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