The Phnom Penh Post

British police probe spy incident

- Jitendra Joshi and Alice Ritchie

BRITISH police raced yesterday to identify an unknown substance that left a former Russian double agent fighting for his life, as Moscow said it had no informatio­n about the “tragic” incident.

Specialist officers from the counterter­rorism squad are helping the investigat­ion into the collapse of Sergei Skripal on Sunday, which has sparked fears of a poison plot.

Media reports named the 66year-old, a former colonel in Russian military intelligen­ce, as the man found unconsciou­s on a bench in a shopping centre in the southweste­rn English city of Salisbury.

Police said a man in his 60s and a woman in her 30s found with him are being treated for “suspected exposure to an unknown substance” and are in critical condition in intensive care in hospital.

A “major incident” was declared and the area remained cordoned off yesterday, while a restaurant nearby, Zizzi, was closed as a “precaution”.

Britain’s chief counterter­rorism officer, Mark Rowley of London’s Metropolit­an Police, said specialist members of his team were supporting the investigat­ion.

“Clearly it’s a very unusual case and the critical thing is to get to the bottom of what has caused this incident as quickly as possible,” he told BBC radio.

Local police say that they are keeping “an open mind”.

Echoes of Litvinenko

Skripal was sentenced to 13 years in jail in Russia in 2006 for betraying Russian intelligen­ce agents to Britain’s MI6 secret service. He was pardoned before being flown to Britain as part of a high-profile spy swap between Russia and the United States in 2010.

His mysterious collapse has revived memories of the death of Alexander Litvinenko, an exRussian spy and Kremlin critic was who poisoned in 2006 with radioactiv­e polonium in London. A British inquiry ruled in 2016 that Russian President Vladimir Putin “probably approved” the killing and identified two Russians, Andrei Lugovoi and Dmitri Kovtun, as the prime suspects.

Putin’s spokesman Dmitry Peskov said yesterday it had no informatio­n on the incident.

“We see that such a tragic situation happened,” he said, adding: “But we don’t have informatio­n about what could be the cause, what this person did.” He said London had not made any requests for assistance in the investigat­ion, but added: “Moscow is always ready for cooperatio­n.”

‘Traitor to Russia’

The incident made the front pages of almost all Britain’s newspapers yesterday, with the Daily Mail speculatin­g that Skripal may have been the target of a revenge “hit” by former colleagues.

Litvinenko’s widow, Marina, told the Times newspaper that watching footage of emergency responders in hazardous material suits “was kind of deja vu”.

William Browder, a British hedge fund manager who has campaigned against the Kremlin over the death in custody of his former employee Sergei Magnitsky, said his “first suspicion” was that Moscow was involved.

“This man was considered by the Kremlin to be a traitor to Russia,” he said. “They have a history of doing assassinat­ions in Russia and abroad. And they have a history of using poisons including in Britain. And therefore that should be the first theory of what happened.”

However, Lugovoi, who is an MP in the Russian Parliament, responded to the British media reports by saying that Britain “suffers from phobias”.

“Because of the presidenti­al elections [on March 18], our actions in Syria, the situation with Skripal could be spun into an anti-Russian provocatio­n,” he told Interfax news agency.

Rowley noted “Russian exiles are not immortal, they do all die and there can be a tendency for some conspiracy theories.

“But likewise we have to be alive to the fact of state threats as illustrate­d by the Litvinenko case,” he said.

 ?? CHRIS J RATCLIFFE/AFP ?? Police stand guard at a cordon at the scene at The Maltings shopping centre in Salisbury, southern England, yesterday where a man and a woman were found critically ill on a bench.
CHRIS J RATCLIFFE/AFP Police stand guard at a cordon at the scene at The Maltings shopping centre in Salisbury, southern England, yesterday where a man and a woman were found critically ill on a bench.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia