The death in London of Putin’s enemy, Nikolai Glushkov, dictated a homicide

The strangulation death of a Russian businessman who fled Vladimir Putin’s regime in 2018 was a murder that looked like suicide, according to a British coroner.

Nikolai Glushkov, Putin’s critic and close partner of billionaire oligarch Boris Berezovsky, was found strangled at his home in south-west London in March 2018, just days after a nerve gas attack on the spy Sergei Skripal, another Russian emigrant living in Britain.

According to the BBC, Glushkov’s fatal injuries “could be consistent with a neck strap applied from behind and the assailant being behind the victim”.

Three years later, forensic major Chinyere Inyama has ruled that Glushkov was illegally murdered. Anti-terrorist police are investigating his death.

Former Glushkov chief Berezovsky, who owned Russian airline Aeroflot and spent millions on a campaign to denounce Putin after the Russian leader forced him to flee in 2003, was hanged in an alleged suicide at his ex-wife’s home in London in 2013.

Glushkov went to trial on charges of major fraud by the group.
Glushkov went to trial on charges of major fraud by the group.
TASS using Getty Images

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