The Borneo Post

Czech leader admits Novichok tests

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PRAGUE: Pro- Russian Czech President Milos Zeman said the Czech Republic had tested the substance Britain says was used to poison a former Russian spy on its soil.

Zeman’s statement countered previous claims by the Czech government rejecting Moscow’s allegation­s that the EU and Nato member state had produced the Novichok nerve agent that was allegedly used to poison Sergei Skripal and his daughter in an English city in March.

The Kremlin said the substance had been produced by the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Sweden when denying allegation­s by London and its allies that Moscow was behind the March 4 incident.

“The Czech Republic produced and tested Novichok, though in a small amount, and then destroyed it,” Zeman, a 73-year- old veteran leftwinger, said in a television interview on Thursday.

Zeman cited a military intelligen­ce report but acknowledg­ed that the country’s civilian intelligen­ce and a military history institute denied that Novichok was produced on Czech soil.

Zeman said “a paralytic poison marked A230 was tested” in the Czech Republic last November but for reasons that are unclear later cited the report as “explicitly labelling A340 as Novichok.”

The foreign ministry confirmed on Friday that Czech labs had tested substances similar to Novichok through micro-synthesis, a process which it insisted is not regarded as production under internatio­nal agreements.

“The paralytic poison used in the attack in Britain is marked A234 and so it’s a different variety from that tested by the Czech Military Research Institute,” it said, adding that the substance was immediatel­y destroyed.

“The Czech Republic has acted honestly and courageous­ly, officially recognisin­g and revealing this informatio­n,” Russian foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Maria Zakharova told reporters.

Dmitry Peskov, spokesman for President Vladimir Putin, said Zeman’s words highlighte­d the “inconsiste­ncy” of the British government’s claims that Russia was behind the Skripal attack.

“It’s a new confirmati­on that the entire Skripal story is an absolute provocatio­n,” Peskov told reporters.

Josef Mlejnek, a political analyst at Charles University in Prague, said Zeman’s claim reflected his staunchly pro-Russian stance.

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