MOSCOW - The chief of Russia's medical and biological agency
says its probe into the death of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat has found no
indication of radioactive poisoning.
Russia's state news agencies quote Vladimir Uiba, the head
of the Federal Medical and Biological Agency, saying that its research has
found that Arafat's death nine years ago was "natural and not caused by
radiation."
Teams of scientists from France, Switzerland and Russia were
asked to determine whether polonium, a rare and extremely lethal substance,
played a role in Arafat's death in a French military hospital in 2004.
Palestinians have long suspected Israel of poisoning him, which Israel denies.
A team of experts, including from Lausanne University
Hospital's Institute of Radiation Physics, opened Arafat's grave in the West
Bank city of Ramallah in November 2012, and took samples from his body to seek
evidence of alleged poisoning.
The Swiss forensic tests showed that Arafat was poisoned to
death with radioactive polonium, his widow Suha said after receiving the
results. She called Arafat's death "a political assassination."
A French study later ruled out the results of the Swiss
tests.
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