Poison laboratory of the Soviet secret services
The Soviet secret services have a poison laboratory also named Laboratory 12. There is a very terrible and dangerous laboratory in the world. Which is also known as Laboratory one and Laboratory 12 and Kamra. If we talk about the world's deadly laboratory, then it is the world's most dangerous laboratory. Poisoning is tested in this laboratory. Poison which is impossible for any scientist in the world to detect. It was revived again in the late 1990s.
In 1930, General Alexander Kutepov, leader of the Russian All Military Union, was drugged and kidnapped in Paris. which he later died.
In 1937 Russian General Evgeny Miller, one of the leaders of the White Movement and head of the Russian All-Military Union, is drugged and kidnapped in Paris and later executed in Russia,
In 1971 Nobel laureate and dissident Alexander Solzhenitsyn was poisoned with what was later determined to be ricin. Solzhenitsyn survived the attempt.
1978: Dissident Bulgarian writer Georgi Markov was assassinated in London, using a small bullet from an umbrella gun laced with ricin; Necessary equipment was prepared in this laboratory. On a Discovery Channel television program about his illustrated book of spy tools called The Ultimate Spy, spy historian H. Keith Melton points out that once the Bulgarian secret service decided to kill Markov, KGB experts at the laboratory gave the Bulgarians a choice. Among the two KGB devices that could be provided for the task: either a poisonous topical Gelatinmarkov, or a device for administering a poison pill, as was eventually done.
On December 13, 1979, an attempt was made to poison Hafizullah Amin, the second president of Afghanistan. Division 8 of the KGB succeeded in infiltrating illegal agent Mitalin Talybov (codenamed SABIR) as the chef of Amin's presidential palace. However, Amin changed his food and drink as if he expected to be poisoned, so his son-in-law became seriously ill and, ironically, was taken to a hospital in Moscow.
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