Early life In 1972, Nikolai Glushkov graduated from the Moscow
Peoples' Friendship University with a degree in physics. In 1981, he completed the
Academy of Foreign Trade with a degree in economics.
Aeroflot job, arrests, trials, and convictions Glushkov had been AvtoVAZ's Finance Chief until he left his job in late 1995 and was appointed as Deputy General Director of
Aeroflot on request from
Yevgeny Shaposhnikov in February 1996. According to
Alexander Goldfarb, he found that the airline company worked as a "cash cow to support international spying operations": 3,000 people out of the total workforce of 14,000 in Aeroflot were
FSB,
SVR, or
GRU officers. All proceeds from ticket sales were distributed to 352 foreign bank accounts that could not be controlled by the Aeroflot administration. Glushkov closed all these accounts and channeled the money to Swiss company called Andava in Switzerland. In 1996, a Forbes article claimed that Glushkov was convicted of theft in 1982. Glushkov and Berezovsky sued Forbes for libel in the United Kingdom, with the ruling coming down against the publisher. Glushkov was arrested in December 2000 by Russian law enforcers and charged with channelling money through his accounting centre
Andava. He was a business partner and close friend of
Boris Berezovsky, who from November 2000 resided in Britain; Berezovsky had to give up his ownership of the
ORT TV channel, transferred to
Roman Abramovich's
Sibneft) in exchange for the promise to release Glushkov, which was not fulfilled. In April 2001,
Andrey Lugovoy organised an "escape" of Glushkov from a hospital where he was kept by authorities. According to Glushkov, that was a set-up by FSB. He had no intention of escaping and "was walking in his slippers to the hospital gate to go home for the night, with his guards' knowledge, as he had done a few days earlier".
Emigration to UK and extradition request Gluskov emigrated to the UK and received
political asylum in 2010. The UK refused to extradite him to Russia. Glushkov reportedly feared being on Putin's hit list and expected to be a likely target. During the subsequent post-mortem his body was found to have marks consistent with
strangulation on the
neck. On 16 March 2018, the
Metropolitan Police stated they were now treating his death as murder and that "at this stage there is nothing to suggest any link to the attempted murders in Salisbury". It was reported after his death that Glushkov might have been poisoned by two Russian men five years earlier. A paramedic said that he treated Glushkov in
Bristol in 2013 after he had collapsed in his room. He had been sharing drinks with two men from Moscow the night before at the
Grand Hotel in
Bristol and believed he had been poisoned with champagne. The paramedics found him with multiple carpet burns on his body and an unusual heart rhythm which they could not recognise. On 9 April 2021, a
coroner with the
West London Coroner's Court ruled Glushkov was unlawfully killed, with evidence to suggest his death was made to look like a suicide, and injuries that "could be consistent with a neck-hold, applied from behind, and the assailant being behind the victim". == References ==