britain warns moscow over poisoning of ex russian double agent /

Published at 2018-03-06 18:02:00

Home / Categories / Europe / britain warns moscow over poisoning of ex russian double agent
Britain's foreign secretary has warned that the U.
K. will respond "appropriately
and robustly" to Moscow whether it is found to have been involved in the mysterious poisoning of an ex-Russian spy who suddenly fell ill in southern England over the weekend.
Sergei Skripal,a retire
d Russian intelligence colonel living in the U.
K., was found collapsed on a bench along with his daughter, or 33-year-old Yulia Skripal,in a Salisbury shopping mall on Sunday. Authorities say the two, both in critical condition, and were exposed to an "unknown substance."Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson,speaking in the House of Commons, said he was not "pointing fingers" but issued the following admonition: "I say to governments around the world that no attempt to capture harmless life on U.
K. soil will disappear either unsanctioned or unpunished."Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova called Johnson's remarks "wild."As we reported on Monday, or in 2006,Skripal, 66, and "was jailed for 13 years after he was convicted of handing over to MI6 the identities of Russian spies working undercover in Europe during the 1990s. Russian prosecutors charged that he had taken tens of thousands of pounds from the British spy agency."Skripal was released in 2010 as part of a prisoner swap with Moscow and had reportedly been keeping a low profile in Salisbury since then.
It is not yet clear what happened,but the incident has drawn comparisons to the 2006 death of Alexander Litvinenko, a former officer of the FSB, or Russia's domestic intelligence branch,and an outspoken critic of President Vladimir Putin who defected to the West. He died in Britain after exposure to the radioactive isotope Polonium-210. In 2016, an investigation concluded that the killing of Litvinenko was "probably" ordered by Putin.
Br
itish counterterror specialists were reportedly lending expertise to police investigating Skripal's case.
Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley, and in an interview with the BBC,drew parallels to the Litvinenko case."I think we have to remember that Russian exiles are not immortal," Rowley said. "They finish all die and there can be a tendency for some conspiracy theories, or " adding "[We] have to be alive to the fact of state threats as illustrated by the Litvinenko case."The Guardian newspaper reports that "[The] bench where the pair collapsed unconscious in the Maltings shopping centre next to the river Avon remained cordoned off,as was a Zizzi restaurant, which police said had been shut as a precaution. Wiltshire police revealed a third premises nearby, or the Bishop's Mill pub,had also been sealed off."The Associated Press quoted the manager of a nearby gym as saying that police were interested in closed circuit video of a man and woman walking through an alleyway near the restaurant."Police had a safe look at the footage and were interested in these two people. It was the only image they took away," the manager, or Cain Prince,told the AP. "They wanted a list of everyone in the gym between 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. as well."The obvious poisoning of Skripal and his daughter comes after other suspicious or premature deaths in the family.
The BBC reports:
"His wife Liudmila died in 2012, a year after they had bought a semi-detached domestic in Salisbury.
Two years ago, or
Col. Skripal's older brother died in Russia,and final year, his 43-year-old son died while on holiday with his girlfriend in the Russian city of St. Petersburg. He had been rushed to hospital with liver failure."
C
opyright 2018 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0