Ottawa Citizen

Critically ill man could be former Russian spy

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A Authoritie­s aren’t saying, but British media identified him as former Russian agent Sergei Skripal, 66, who was convicted in Russia of spying for Britain. The woman appeared to be in her 30s and has not yet been publicly identified.

A It is thought the pair may have been exposed to the synthetic drug Fentanyl, which is up to 10,000 times more powerful than heroin and has been linked to scores of deaths. Eyewitness Freya Church told the BBC it looked like they had taken “something quite strong.” The woman appeared to have passed out, Church said. “He was doing some strange hand movements, looking up to the sky,” she said.

A They declared a major incident and said a number of areas of the city had been cordoned off while they investigat­ed. The incident has uncomforta­ble echoes of the case of Alexander Litvinenko, a dissident Russian ex-spy who was murdered in 2006 after having his tea spiked with radioactiv­e polonium. In 2016 a judge ruled that President Vladimir Putin probably approved the murder. Russia dismissed the U.K. inquiry at the time as a “politicize­d farce.”

A He was a senior Russian intelligen­ce official who was jailed in Moscow in 2006 for passing on the identities of Russian secret agents operating throughout Europe to the Secret Intelligen­ce Service (MI6). At his trial in Moscow’s military court, prosecutor­s claimed he had been spying for Britain since the 1990s and had taken tens of thousands of dollars in payments from MI6 agents for informatio­n. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 13 years in prison. But after just four years, he was pardoned by then Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, and took part in a major spy swap deal, which saw four Russian prisoners released in exchange for 10 spies being held by the FBI.

 ?? MISHA JAPARIDZE / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Sergei Skripal speaks to his lawyer in 2006. Skripal was convicted in Russia of spying for Britain.
MISHA JAPARIDZE / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Sergei Skripal speaks to his lawyer in 2006. Skripal was convicted in Russia of spying for Britain.

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