| November 2006 |
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Polonium-210, a radioactive isotope that was allegedly used to poison a Russian defector in London, could not have originated in Russia, a former nuclear minister said Monday. 
Austria's Health Ministry categorically denied Monday a Russian official's allegation that the toxic radioactive isotope polonium-210 can be readily obtained in Vienna clinics. 
Polonium-210, a radioactive isotope that was allegedly used to poison a Russian defector in London, could not have originated in Russia, a former nuclear minister said Monday. 
A Vilnius court has ruled to extend the detention in custody of a Belarusian national suspected of espionage by one month, a Lithuanian security officer said Monday.
Georgia intends to buy natural gas from Iran, the South Caucasus country's prime minister said Monday. 
A CIS summit Tuesday in the Belarusian capital, Minsk, will look into ways of modernizing the post-Soviet alliance, to make it an efficient tool of cooperation, a Kremlin official said Monday. 
British doctors will conduct radiological tests on three people who could have been subjected to radiation in London, a representative of the UK Health Protection Agency said Monday. 
An international agreement to build ITER, an experimental nuclear fusion reactor in France, may be joined next year by another four countries, the director of a Russian nuclear center said Monday. 
Greek wines have the opportunity to expand their share on the Russian market following bans on wine imports from Georgia and Moldova, an agriculture minister said Monday. 



