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Mystery of James Bond-style murder after commuter died when he was poked with poison-tipped UMBRELLA 45 years ago

MYSTERY still surrounds the murder of a commuter who died when he was poked by the tip of a poisoned umbrella.

Bulgarian defector Georgi Ivanov Markov died in 1978 of blood poisoning in hospital after claiming a stranger jabbed him while he was crossing Waterloo Bridge in central London.

Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov had been enjoying life in the Western world, but it appears secret Communist killers had other ideas
The bus-stop brolly assassination attracted huge media attention, like this reporting from The Sunday Times

The dissident fled Bulgaria in 1969, settling in Clapham in the city’s south and working for the BBC as a playwright.

In London, he was a vocal critic of his home country‘s communist regime.

On September 7, 1978, Markov was waiting for a bus on the south side of Waterloo Bridge on his way to work at BBC’s Bush House, the old home of the broadcaster’s world service.

He felt a sharp pain in his right thigh, and turned around to spot a stranger picking up an umbrella off the pavement.

Markov said the man apologised in a foreign accent before taking off in a taxi.

The rebel Bulgarian went to work as normal, but later fell ill and by the next day was bed-ridden at St James’ Hospital in Balham.

Doctors surveyed the small puncture wound in his thigh – and told Markov his blood had been poisoned.

He died in hospital aged 49, three days following the umbrella ambush.

News reports from the time said it led Scotland Yard into “one of the most extraordinary investigations in its history”.

An autopsy discovered a small 1.7mm pellet in Markov’s thigh, with tiny holes on either side of it where poison could have been stored.

It’s believed that poison was ricin, a deadly substance extracted from the waste of castor beans being made to oil.

Ricin kills the body’s cells by preventing them from producing proteins.

Following the fall of the Soviet Union, the West learned that Russian spy unit KGB had developed the menacing umbrellas.

Markov was survived by wife Annabel Dilke, who was left raising their daughter on her own.

While no-one has ever been brought to justice over the James Bond-style Cold War poisoning, there were strong suspicions centred on one alleged Communist agent.

AGENT PICCADILLY

That was Italian man Francesco Gullino, also known by code name “Piccadilly“.

Bulgarian journalist Hristo Hristov wrote that Gullino had been arrested twice in Bulgaria for drug smuggling and was given an ultimatum – be sent to the clink or become a secret agent in the West.

According to Hristov’s book, titled “The Double Life of Agent Piccadilly”, Gullino set up base in Copenhagen as an “art dealer”.

It’s believed the Italian kept his art broker-secret agent double life going until 1990 and received a Bulgarian state medal “for services to security and public order”.

Gullino was captured and questioned by British and Danish authorities in Copenhagen in 1993, and while it’s reported that he admitted to being in London at the time of Markov’s murder, he denied involvement.

A Danish Broadcasting Corporation documentary released in March 2023 cast the spotlight back onto the mystery.

The documentary depicted a renewed probe into Gullino’s alleged secret activities, with filmmakers tracking him down in Austria in June 2021.

He was interviewed and again denied the accusations levelled against him.

Gullino was found dead in his apartment in Austrian town Wels shortly after the interview.

Scotland Yard confirmed to The Sun that as of June 2024, there remained no investigative updates.

The case continues to be marred by mystery.

PA:Press Association
This tiny pellet found in Markov’s thigh contained deadly ricin poison[/caption]
Getty Images - Getty
A replica of the KGB umbrella can be found at a Washington spy museum[/caption]

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