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Russia Publishes Correspondence With UK, Including Letter to Theresa May

© Sputnik / Nataliya Seliverstova / Go to the mediabankThe Prosecutor General's Office of Russian Federation on Petrovka Street, Moscow.
The Prosecutor General's Office of Russian Federation on Petrovka Street, Moscow. - Sputnik International
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Russia’s Prosecutor General’s Office has published a set of documents proving the UK’s unwillingness to cooperate on several high-profile cases, including the death of Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky.

The correspondence released by the Russian Prosecutor General's Office covers the period now-Prime Minister Theresa May served as home secretary. It is presented in the office's Telegram channel.

British Prime Minister Theresa May, center, attends a breakfast meeting at an EU summit in Brussels on Friday, March 23, 2018 - Sputnik International
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Of 16 documents published, only one letter was addressed to May in person: a personal letter from the deputy prosecutor general, written in 2010. In this letter, the deputy prosecutor general raised the issue of inadequate measures taken by British authorities to ensure the safety of participants in the criminal process in the Berezovsky case.

"This letter, as well as later addresses by Russia's Office of Prosecutor General to Theresa May, remain unanswered," the office said in a statement.

On April 9, the Prosecutor General's Office held a briefing on the circumstances of the poisoning of former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia. The office pointed out that the Skripal case is going just as the case of Berezovsky as well as that of Alexander Litvinenko went.

It was also reported that "copies of individual documents from relevant criminal cases, including correspondence with the UK Home Office, including directly with Mrs. May during her service as home secretary, will be presented."

Berezovsky, who was involved in numerous criminal cases in various countries, died in his home near London in 2013. His death was determined to be a suicide.

Litvinenko, a former Russian spy, left Russia for the UK in 2000 after several criminal cases were opened against him. He was poisoned in November 2006 with what was determined to be polonium-210. The UK maintains that his death is Russia's doing.

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