Belfast Telegraph

Russia accuses UK of abducting nerve gas poisoning victim as she is moved to secret location

- BY RYAN HOOPERS

THE Russian Embassy in London has accused British authoritie­s of the “abduction” of Yulia Skripal and her former double agent father Sergei after she was released from hospital and taken to a secure location.

The Russian nationals were poisoned with a nerve agent more than a month ago, leaving them seriously ill in Salisbury District Hospital, in an incident thought to have been ordered by Moscow.

Yulia’s release by medics was confirmed yesterday morning, with her father’s health said to be improving also despite grave fears he would not survive coming into contact with the military-grade nerve agent Novichok in Salisbury on March 4.

Ms Skripal (33) is believed to have been released to a secure location amid a continued diplomatic fall-out between the two countries. The Russian Embassy remains perturbed by a refusal by UK authoritie­s to grant Ms

❝ This is not the end of Yulia’s treatment, but is a significan­t milestone

Skripal’s cousin Viktoria a visa to visit her family.

In a series of statements, posted on social media following Ms Skripal’s release from hospital, the Russian Embassy said: “Secret resettleme­nt of Mr and Ms Skripal, barred from any contact with their family, will be seen as an abduction or at least as their forced isolation.”

Ms Skripal’s release f rom hospital was met with a similar broadside from the embassy, which has repeatedly criticised the handling of the investigat­ion into the attack.

In a statement, a spokesman said: “We congratula­te Yulia on her recovery. Yet we need urgent proof that what is being done to her is done on her own free will.”

Announcing an update on the Skripals’ conditions, Salisbury District Hospital medical director Dr Christine Blanshard said: Dr Christine Blanshard, medical director, and Lorna Wilkinson, director of nursing, make a statement outside Salisbury District Hospital to give an update on Yulia (centre) and Sergei Skripals’ conditions. Yulia has been discharged from hospital, but her father Sergei is still undergoing treatment

“Both patients have responded exceptiona­lly well to the treatment we’ve been providing. But, equally, both patients are at different stages in their recovery.

“I want to take this opportunit­y to wish Yulia well. This is not the end of her treatment, but marks a significan­t milestone.”

During a short address to reporters outside the hospital, Dr Blanshard said of Mr Skripal: “Although he is recovering more slowly than Yulia, we hope that he too will be able to leave hospital in due course.”

Dr Blanshard paid tribute to hospital staff who worked during the “enormously testing” recent weeks. “They have pulled together, not just to deliver outstandin­g care to the individual­s caught up in these terrible events, but to all our patients as they do day in, day out,” she said.

Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey, who was also exposed to the nerve agent, was discharged from the hospital on March 22.

Asked f or her reaction to news that Ms Skripal has been released from hospital, Prime

Minister Theresa May said: “Well obviously I welcome the fact that Yulia Skripal has been discharged from hospital and I wish her the best for her continuing recovery, and I’d like to say a huge thank you to all the staff at the hospital in Salisbury who have looked after her and her father so well.”

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov previously said it was “outrageous” that Britain had failed to provide consular access to Ms Skripal as news of her improving condition was

announced earlier this month. The Russian Embassy in London also issued a series of what it termed “questions without answer” about the Skripal case, including whether the UK had ever produced the Novichok nerve agent.

Britain has said Russian state involvemen­t is the only plausible explanatio­n for the attack, and has led a worldwide reaction involving the expulsion of more than 100 Russian diplomats. But Mr Lavrov accused Western countries of “playing children’s games”.

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