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UK INvestigators believe they identified Skripal attack suspects-Russia

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UK INvestigators believe they identified Skripal attack suspects-Russia Empty UK INvestigators believe they identified Skripal attack suspects-Russia

Post  Admin Thu 19 Jul 2018, 10:11 am

https://www.rt.com/uk/433654-skripal-suspects-press-association/?utm_source=browser&utm_medium=push_notifications&utm_campaign=push_notifications
UK investigators believe they identified Skripal attack suspects – Press Association source
Published time: 19 Jul, 2018 05:03
Edited time: 19 Jul, 2018 07:16
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UK investigators believe they identified Skripal attack suspects – Press Association source
FILE PHOTO: Police officers near the home of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury . ©️ Hannah McKay / Reuters
Investigators in the UK believe they have identified a number of suspects in the March poisoning of ex-double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, the Press Association reports, citing an unnamed source.
The investigators reportedly believe that “Russians” are involved in the attack after they analyzed CCTV footage.

“Investigators believe they have identified the suspected perpetrators of the Novichok attack through CCTV and have cross-checked this with records of people who entered the country around that time. They [the investigators] are sure they [the suspects] are Russian,” the Press Association said citing “a source with knowledge of the investigation.”
https://www.rt.com/uk/433654-skripal-suspects-press-association/?utm_source=browser&utm_medium=push_notifications&utm_campaign=push_notifications
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Fire and Rescue Service personnel arrive on after Amesbury poisoning was confirmed on July 6, 2018. ©️ Henry NichollsLeak at Porton Down lab may be behind UK nerve-agent poisonings – Russian embassy
The news comes around two weeks after a British man and woman in their 40s were hospitalized following “suspected exposure to an unknown substance” in the town of Amesbury, around 12km from Salisbury.

The substance was later identified as the same nerve agent that was used against Sergei Skripal and his daughter in March.

One of the Amesbury victims, Dawn Sturgess, died on July 8. Her partner, Charlie Rowley, who is still in the hospital, claims that the nerve agent came from a perfume bottle, according to Rowley’s brother.

On Wednesday, Wiltshire Police and a counter-terrorism unit conducted a “structured search” of Queen Elizabeth Gardens in Salisbury as part of the ongoing probe into the Amesbury incident.

From the very beginning, British authorities have pointed the finger at Russia for the Skripal poisoning, but have yet to present any evidence of Russian involvement. Moscow has repeatedly denied playing any role in the attack and has offered to assist in the investigation, but says it has been walled off by London. The UK and its allies, reiterating the ‘highly likely’ mantra of Moscow’s culpability, also initiated a mass expulsion of Russian diplomats from over a dozen countries.

However, not all the Western powers were convinced by the UK’s allegations and anti-Russian rhetoric. For example, Austria refused to follow suit in expelling Russian diplomats.

READ MORE: Leak at Porton Down lab may be behind UK nerve-agent poisonings – Russian embassy

Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said that Vienna and Moscow maintain “good” relations and he wants Austria to remain a “bridge building” platform where “hundreds of diplomats hold talks” on a daily basis.
Germany did expel Russian diplomats in March, but more than three months after the incident it apparently received no facts to prove Russia was to blame for it.

One of the most ‘solid’ arguments in the Skripal saga to pin the blame on Moscow was that the Novichok nerve agent allegedly used in the attack came from Russia. However, Czech President Milos Zeman later said that his country had also previously produced and tested a nerve agent from the so-called ‘Novichok family’. Additionally, German media reported that Novichok was obtained by German intelligence back in the 1990s and it even shared the formula with its “closest allies,” including the intelligence services of the US and UK.
Published time: 19 Jul, 2018 05:03
Edited time: 19 Jul, 2018 07:16
Get short URL
UK investigators believe they identified Skripal attack suspects – Press Association source
FILE PHOTO: Police officers near the home of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury . ©️ Hannah McKay / Reuters
Investigators in the UK believe they have identified a number of suspects in the March poisoning of ex-double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter, the Press Association reports, citing an unnamed source.
The investigators reportedly believe that “Russians” are involved in the attack after they analyzed CCTV footage.

“Investigators believe they have identified the suspected perpetrators of the Novichok attack through CCTV and have cross-checked this with records of people who entered the country around that time. They [the investigators] are sure they [the suspects] are Russian,” the Press Association said citing “a source with knowledge of the investigation.”

Read more
Fire and Rescue Service personnel arrive on after Amesbury poisoning was confirmed on July 6, 2018. ©️ Henry NichollsLeak at Porton Down lab may be behind UK nerve-agent poisonings – Russian embassy
The news comes around two weeks after a British man and woman in their 40s were hospitalized following “suspected exposure to an unknown substance” in the town of Amesbury, around 12km from Salisbury.

The substance was later identified as the same nerve agent that was used against Sergei Skripal and his daughter in March.

One of the Amesbury victims, Dawn Sturgess, died on July 8. Her partner, Charlie Rowley, who is still in the hospital, claims that the nerve agent came from a perfume bottle, according to Rowley’s brother.

On Wednesday, Wiltshire Police and a counter-terrorism unit conducted a “structured search” of Queen Elizabeth Gardens in Salisbury as part of the ongoing probe into the Amesbury incident.

From the very beginning, British authorities have pointed the finger at Russia for the Skripal poisoning, but have yet to present any evidence of Russian involvement. Moscow has repeatedly denied playing any role in the attack and has offered to assist in the investigation, but says it has been walled off by London. The UK and its allies, reiterating the ‘highly likely’ mantra of Moscow’s culpability, also initiated a mass expulsion of Russian diplomats from over a dozen countries.

However, not all the Western powers were convinced by the UK’s allegations and anti-Russian rhetoric. For example, Austria refused to follow suit in expelling Russian diplomats.

READ MORE: Leak at Porton Down lab may be behind UK nerve-agent poisonings – Russian embassy

Chancellor Sebastian Kurz said that Vienna and Moscow maintain “good” relations and he wants Austria to remain a “bridge building” platform where “hundreds of diplomats hold talks” on a daily basis.
Germany did expel Russian diplomats in March, but more than three months after the incident it apparently received no facts to prove Russia was to blame for it.

One of the most ‘solid’ arguments in the Skripal saga to pin the blame on Moscow was that the Novichok nerve agent allegedly used in the attack came from Russia. However, Czech President Milos Zeman later said that his country had also previously produced and tested a nerve agent from the so-called ‘Novichok family’. Additionally, German media reported that Novichok was obtained by German intelligence back in the 1990s and it even shared the formula with its “closest allies,” including the intelligence services of the US and UK.


https://www.rt.com/uk/433109-porton-down-leak-novichok/
Leak at Porton Down lab may be behind UK nerve-agent poisonings – Russian embassy
Published time: 14 Jul, 2018 17:33
Edited time: 15 Jul, 2018 10:54
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Leak at Porton Down lab may be behind UK nerve-agent poisonings – Russian embassy
Fire and Rescue Service personnel arrive on after Amesbury poisoning was confirmed on July 6, 2018. ©️ Henry Nicholls / Reuters
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A leak at the Porton Down secret laboratory may explain the nerve agent poisonings in Britain, as both cases happened in nearby Salisbury and Amesbury, the Russian embassy in the UK has said.
The embassy was asked by the media to comment on Friday’s announcement by the UK police that a small bottle they found in the home of one of the Amesbury poisoning victims contained the infamous Novichok nerve agent.

However, Russian diplomats said that they “cannot check or verify any British statements” because London “refuses to cooperate with us in any way possible” on the issue.

Read more
Forensic investigators in Amesbury, Britain, July 6, 2018 ©️ Henry NichollsUK police claim to have found bottle containing 'Novichok' nerve agent in Amesbury victim’s house
Russia would like the UK to share its data on the nerve agent attacks that targeted former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury last March, and another poisoning in Amesbury in late June, the embassy said. However, it added that they were “almost sure that the British side will not be informing us directly.”

The Russian mission pointed out that both poisoning cases took place “in the vicinity of the secret military chemical laboratory in Porton Down,” which may well lead to the conclusion that “some kind of ‘leak’ from this laboratory might have taken place. This cannot be excluded.”

“We have already demanded that the UK reveal information concerning ongoing research and production of chemical warfare agents in Porton Down,” it added.

The Porton Down chemical laboratory is located some 8km from both Salisbury and Amesbury.

The embassy also criticized the British authorities for asking the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) to examine the substance found by the police at Amesbury.

The “independent verification” procedure initiated by the UK is “non-transparent, goes beyond the mechanisms outlined in the Chemical Weapons Convention (CWC),” it said.

READ MORE: Full alert in Salisbury as man 'falls ill' near restaurant where Skripals ate before poisoning

“This initiative is yet another step towards politicizing the OPCW to the detriment of its reputation,” the Russian mission said.

In late June, the UK and its allies voted to expand the powers of the OPCW, allowing the body to not only investigate alleged chemical attacks, but also to assign blame for incidents. Russia said that it was a “dangerous” development, as the neutral body was being turned into a political tool that will be used by the West to apply pressure on Syria and other dissident states.

The British counter-terrorism police said on Saturday they had recovered not only the bottle with the nerve agent, but more than 400 items that “are potentially contaminated” as part of the Amesbury probe. The suspicious objects have been submitted to laboratories for analysis, it added.

"Work is ongoing to establish whether the nerve agent is from the same batch as used in the attack against Sergei and Yulia Skripal in March, and this remains a main line of enquiry for the investigation team," the police statement read.

Read more
Forensic investigators, wearing protective suits in Amesbury, Britain on July 6, 2018. ©️ Henry NichollsUK should investigate Salisbury & Amesbury incidents instead of blaming Russia – foreign ministry
On June 30, Charlie Rowley and his Dawn Sturgess were hospitalized after being poisoned at their home in Amesbury with what experts at Porton Down later identified as Novichok nerve agent. Sturgess died a week later, while Rowley’s health has improved. He is no longer in a critical condition, according reports on Wednesday.

In early March, Sergei and Yulia Skripal were found unconscious on the bench in Salisbury after a chemical attack and rushed to hospital. The UK authorities said that a Soviet-designed nerve agent, which they called ‘Novichok,’ had been used against the pair.

This gave London an opportunity to claim that Russia was “highly likely” responsible for the poisoning, and to introduce sanctions against Moscow. However, months later, the UK has yet to provide any convincing proof of Russia’s involvement, and it has turned down all requests for cooperation.

Meanwhile, the Skripals have miraculously recovered from the poisoning, despite Britain calling Novichok a deadly war-grade chemical. Their whereabouts are currently unknown, and Russian diplomats have been denied access to the pair.

The UK authorities say that the incidents in Amesbury and Salisbury are linked, but Professor of Chemistry at Cornell University, Dave Collum, told RT that “it’s impossible to make a connection as there’s been no data presented” to the public to back those claims.

He also reiterated that London’s statements of only Russia being capable of producing the novichok chemical were “totally false.” He described the nerve agent as “a simple compound,” which is actually just “three steps from commercially available materials.”

“I’ve put it on a final exam on my course… and they [the students] all got full credit. It was so easy, I knew none would lose credit because it’s like asking a bunch of bakers to make chocolate chip cookie recipe,” the US chemist said.

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