WILD CHARGES
BRITISH “TERRORISM" IN RUSSIA. ALLEGATIONS OF ORGANISED MURDER. MOSCOW, August 3. Moscow’s public prosecutor, Vishinski, writing in the newspaper "Red Star,” attacks the British Intelligence Service for organising murders of Russian leaders and the destruction of munitions and power stations. The charges include an allegation that Britain organised, the murders of Vorovsky, chief Soviet delegate to the Lausanne Conference, and Voikoff, Minister at Warsaw, and attempted to blow up the Kremlin in 1927.. Vishinski declares that the staff of Metropolitan Vickers, the last surviving British business in Russia, which was liquidated in May, 1938, were officers disguised as engineers sent to blow up power stations in the event of war.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 4 August 1938, Page 7
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112WILD CHARGES Wairarapa Times-Age, 4 August 1938, Page 7
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