China Daily (Hong Kong)

Russia calls for cooperatio­n on nerve agent case

-

LONDON — UK police said on Saturday that search teams have found over 400 items as part of the investigat­ion into the poisoning of two Britons by the nerve agent Novichok but searches will likely take many more weeks as officers seek further evidence.

Metropolit­an Police announced a breakthrou­gh in the case on Friday when they said they had found a small bottle believed to be the source of the nerve agent that killed Dawn Sturgess and sickened Charlie Rowley.

The bottle was found at Rowley’s home in Amesbury, a southweste­rn town not far from Salisbury, where UK authoritie­s say Russian ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were poisoned with Novichok in March.

UK blames the Russian government for the March attack, an accusation the Kremlin has denied. The case prompted Western nations including the United States and UK to expel scores of Russian diplomats and for Russia to retaliate with similar expulsions.

The Russian embassy in London called on UK on Saturday to share informatio­n about the substance used in the poisoning.

“We would like the British side to share with us the informatio­n regarding the type of substance used and the correlatio­n between this incident and other mysterious poisonings happening in the vicinity of the secret military chemical laboratory in Porton Down,” it said in a statement posted on its website before Saturday’s police statement.

Police are trying to figure out whether the substance in the bottle confirmed by

... The search process ... has been one of the most complex and difficult that UK policing has ever faced.”

Neil Basu,

scientists as Novichok came from the same batch used in the attack against the Skripals. They’re also looking into where the bottle came from and how it got into Rowley’s house.

“It is not an exaggerati­on to say that the search process linked with both this and the Salisbury investigat­ion has been one of the most complex and difficult that UK policing has ever faced,” said Assistant Police Commission­er Neil Basu, UK’s top counterter­rorism officer.

The force said, in total, search teams recovered over 400 “exhibits, samples and items” linked to the investigat­ion into the poisoning of Sturgess and Rowley. It said a “significan­t number” of the items are potentiall­y contaminat­ed and have been sent to laboratori­es for analysis.

Sturgess, 44, and Rowley, 45, were sickened on June 30. Sturgess died in a hospital on July 8. Rowley was in critical condition for more than a week, but has regained consciousn­ess.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China