The Borneo Post

OPCW to meet over spy nerve agent claims

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THE HAGUE: The world’s chemical watchdog is to meet behind closed doors yesterday, after a British laboratory said it had not proved that Russia manufactur­ed a deadly nerve agent used to poison a former Russian spy.

The talks at the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons ( OPCW) have been requested by Moscow which said it wanted to “address the situation around the allegation­s in regards to the incident in Salisbury.”

“We hope to discuss the whole matter and call on Britain to provide every possible element of evidence they might have in their hands,” Russia’s ambassador to Ireland, Yury Filatov, told reporters.

On Tuesday, the British military facility analysing the nerve agent used on former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia, said it was not in a position to say where the substance had originated.

Skripal, who has lived in Britain since a spy swap in 2010, and his daughter have been in hospital since the March 4 poisoning that London and its major Western allies have blamed on Russia.

The 41 member states of the OPCW’s executive council are to convene at 10am at the organisati­on’s headquarte­rs in The Hague.

The meeting comes after Moscow also received and analysed samples of the Novichok agent used in the attack.

“Russia is interested in establishi­ng the whole truth of the matter,” Filatov said.

But Britain’s foreign ministry accused Russia of requesting the meeting to undermine the OPCW’s investigat­ion.

“This Russian initiative is yet again another diversiona­ry tactic, intended to undermine the work of the OPCW in reaching a conclusion,” the ministry said in a statement.

“Of course, there is no requiremen­t in the Chemical Weapons Convention for the victim of a chemical weapons attack to engage in a joint investigat­ion with the likely perpetrato­r,” it said.

Gary Aitkenhead, chief executive of the Porton Down defence laboratory, told Britain’s Sky News that analysts had identified the substance as military- grade Novichok, the word used for a category of nerve agents developed in Soviet times.

But he added: “We have not identified the precise source.”

“It is our job to provide the scientific evidence of what this particular nerve agent is, we identified that it is from this particular family and that it is a military grade, but it is not our job to say where it was manufactur­ed,” Aitkenhead said. “Extremely sophistica­ted methods” were needed to create the nerve agent, he said, adding that was “something only in the capabiliti­es of a state actor”

Following his remarks, a British government spokespers­on said Porton Down’s identifica­tion of Novichok was “only one part of the intelligen­ce picture”.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? An exterior view of the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) building in The Hague.
— AFP photos An exterior view of the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) building in The Hague.
 ??  ?? File photo shows British military personnel wearing protective coveralls work to remove a vehicle connected to nerve agent attack in Salisbury from a residentia­l street in Gillingham, southeast England.
File photo shows British military personnel wearing protective coveralls work to remove a vehicle connected to nerve agent attack in Salisbury from a residentia­l street in Gillingham, southeast England.

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