Irish Daily Mirror

DOC: GET READY FOR NOVICHOK..

Spy poison alert over ‘more outbreaks’

- BY CHRIS HUGHES Defence and Security Editor c.hughes@mirror.co.uk

HEALTH chiefs sent out a warning over fears of more Novichok outbreaks just days before the nerve agent killed tragic Dawn Sturgess.

The Mirror has discovered a medical expert briefed doctors across several counties in southern England on how to treat victims of the Russian toxin.

The dossier circulated was written five days after mother-of-three Dawn, 44, and partner Charlie Rowley were contaminat­ed by what police yesterday described as a “high dose of the poison”.

The document makes it clear that emergency staff close to the Salisbury attack and the Amesbury outbreak, both in Wiltshire, fear the UK could be rocked by more Novichok cases.

On Sunday, British Home Secretary Sajid Javid had claimed during a visit to Amesbury that the “risk to the public remains very low”.

But the health warning leaked to the Mirror contradict­s his assurances.

Detailing a list of the nerve agent’s horrific symptoms, the expert tells medics at hospitals how to react if “you get in trouble” after an outbreak.

One senior health official asks recipients of the email to keep the memo, written on July 5, and “use should you be confronted by patients incapacita­ted for no clear reason and think they may be subject to a chemical attack from Russia”.

In the memo, drafted by a senior Emergency Medical Consultant at a hospital we have agreed not to name, recipients are told: “Regarding nerve agents. I’ve written a guide which might be helpful to circulate.

“There’s lots of experience Salisbury if you are in trouble.”

The consultant advises that Novichok can penetrate “through skin, ingestion, inoculatio­n, inhalation”.

PROTECTION

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They also tell doctors and consultant­s that they should keep themselves safe by wearing “long gowns and double-glove with long gloves”.

Readers are furthermor­e advised to wear “face and eye protection”. And there is chilling detail on how to identify patients with possible Novichok poisoning.

The memo states: “Patients will present with: pinpoint pupils, hypotensio­n, hypothermi­a, copious secretions, diarrhoea, weakness, twitching muscles, respirator­y insufficie­ncy, seizures.

Death is by pulseless electrical activity arrest, respirator­y arrest.”

The expert asks colleagues to send urine and blood samples from possible cases for analysis at a poison centre in the Midlands. Police have not found the item that poisoned Ms Sturgess and Mr Rowley, 45, who received a high dose of Novichok through touching a vessel containing it. Ms Sturgess died on Sunday, months after former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia were infected by Novichok placed on their front door.

Both have recovered and are convalesci­ng at a secret MI5 location Charlie Rowley while police probe the suspected Kremlin assassinat­ion attempt.

The separate murder investigat­ion launched into the death of Ms Sturgess could last for months. Wiltshire Police Chief Constable Kier Pritchard admitted it was a “real concern” that the contaminat­ed container which poisoned Ms Sturgess and Mr Rowley had not been found.

Asked whether his force had failed to protect the public, he replied: “We have heard today there is no suggestion any contaminat­e exposure has come from any of those sites that have previously been secure and are

DAWN Sturgess’s dad has told of his heartbreak at her death.

Stephen, speaking from the family home in Durrington, Wilts, not far from the Amesbury flat where she fell ill, said: “I’m devastated.”

Wellwisher­s left flowers and cards yesterday outside the Salisbury homeless shelter where Dawn, who died of heart failure on Sunday, had been staying.

Dawn’s partner Charlie Rowley, believed to currently in the process decontamin­ated.”

Mr Pritchard added that 21 people – eight police officers or staff, a paramedic, nine medical staff and three members of the public – had sought medical attention and all tests had proven negative.

Meanwhile, a red Ford Transit van Mr Rowley was a passenger in on June 30 has been recovered and sent for testing at the British Government laboratory at Porton Down. Three other men who also travelled in the van have been tested and show no signs of exposure to Novichok.

Searches by counter-terror police

have had the highest concentrat­ions of Novichok on his hands, remains in hospital in a critical condition.

The couple are thought to have picked up a contaminat­ed container dumped by the assassins who were sent to kill Russian former double agent Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulia in March.

It emerged yesterday that there is a growing sense of unease in Salisbury of being and local officers continued yesterday in Amesbury, where Mr Rowley lived and he and Ms Sturgess fell ill, and Salisbury, where Ms Sturgess lived.

Paying tribute to Ms Sturgess yesterday, Prime Minister Theresa May said in the Commons: “I am sure the House will join me in sending our deepest condolence­s to the family and friends of Dawn Sturgess, who passed away last night.

“The police and security services are working urgently to establish the full facts in what is now a murder investigat­ion.”

and nearby Amesbury in the wake of the poisoning.

Ricky Rogers, leader of the Labour group on Wiltshire council, said the death had “heightened tension”.

He said: “Local residents have never been told enough about the first incident back in March. I think someone from counterter­rorism needs to come here and tell us what they know.”

 ??  ?? TOXIN VICTIM Mum Dawn Sturgess died on Sunday SCENE Salisbury cordon TRIBUTE Sign near home
TOXIN VICTIM Mum Dawn Sturgess died on Sunday SCENE Salisbury cordon TRIBUTE Sign near home
 ??  ?? FIGHT FOR LIFE
FIGHT FOR LIFE
 ??  ?? TARGET Sergei Skripal
TARGET Sergei Skripal

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