The New Zealand Herald

Putin says UK suspects identified

Russian leader says ‘nothing criminal’ about pair accused of poisoning ex-spy

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President Vladimir Putin says Russia has identified the two men that Britain named as suspects in the poisoning of a former Russian spy, and that there is “nothing criminal” about them.

Britain last week charged two alleged agents of Russia’s military intelligen­ce agency in absentia with the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia. Britain blames the Russian Government for the attack, a claim that Moscow has vehemently denied.

Speaking at a panel of an economic conference in Russia’s Far East, Putin insisted they do not work for the military.

“We know who these people are, we have found them,” Putin said. “There is nothing special or criminal about it, I can assure you.”

Asked by the panel’s moderator if the men work for the military, Putin replied that they are “civilians” and called on the men to come forward.

“I would like to call on them so that they can hear us today: They should go to some media outlet. I hope they will come forward and tell about themselves.”

After the Skripals were poisoned March 4, Britain and more than two dozen other countries expelled a total of 150 Russian spies working under diplomatic cover. Russia kicked out a similar number of those countries’ envoys.

British Prime Minister Theresa May said the use of a chemical weapon in the city of Salisbury, which left a British woman dead and four

people, including Skripal and his daughter, seriously ill, was carried out by officers of the GRU intelligen­ce service and was almost certainly approved “at a senior level of the Russian state.”

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