Global Times

UK races to find poison source

Police verify nerve agent used on ex-Russian spy, daughter

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British detectives on Thursday scrambled to find the source of the nerve agent used in the attempted murder of a Russian former double-agent and his daughter.

Sergei Skripal, 66, who moved to Britain in a 2010 spy swap, is in a critical condition in hospital along with his daughter Yulia after they collapsed on a bench outside a shopping center on Sunday.

A policeman also fell ill after coming to their aid but is showing signs of recovery, according to interior minister Amber Rudd.

“The two targets are still in very serious condition, the policeman is talking and is engaging so I’m more optimistic for him, but it’s too early to say,” she told ITV1’s Good Morning Britain.

The brazen poisoning in the southweste­rn English city of Salisbury is already being linked with Russia by British politician­s and the media, sparking an angry response in Moscow.

On Wednesday, British police confirmed for the first time that a nerve agent was used and that their probe was now an attempted murder investigat­ion.

“Police are now in a position to confirm that their symptoms are a result of exposure to a nerve agent,” said the Metropolit­an Police.

“Scientific tests by government experts have identified the specific nerve agent used which will help identify the source.”

The Times newspaper reported on Thursday that Skripal’s condition was severe, quoting a senior unnamed British government official.

“The feeling is that he is not going to make it out of this,” the source told the newspaper. “I think it could be more positive [ for Yulia].”

Police have cordoned off an Italian restaurant and a pub that the pair are believed to have visited.

A diner in the restaurant told the Times that Skripal had eaten there on Sunday, and that he was in an agitated state.

“He was going absolutely crazy, I didn’t understand it and couldn’t understand them,” the witness said.

Police say they are keeping an open mind about what happened, but Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has alluded to Russia.

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