Weekend Herald

May’s promise over any Russian role

- Reuters

PM vows to respond if Moscow shown to be involved in attack

Estelle Shirbon in London

Britain will respond appropriat­ely if evidence shows Moscow was behind a nerve agent attack on a former Russian spy and his daughter in England, Prime Minister Theresa May said yesterday.

Former double agent Sergei Skripal, 66, and his daughter, Yulia, 33, have been in hospital since they were found unconsciou­s on Monday on a bench outside a shopping centre in the quiet cathedral city of Salisbury.

“We will do what is appropriat­e, we will do what is right, if it is proved to be the case that this is statespons­ored,” May told ITV News, when asked whether Britain could expel the Russian ambassador.

“But let’s give the police the time and space to actually conduct their investigat­ion,” she added, in her first comments on the attack since police said on Wednesday a nerve agent was used.

Government experts have identified the substance, which will help identify the source, but have not made the informatio­n public.

“Of course, if action needs to be taken, then the Government will do that. We’ll do that properly, at the right time, and on the basis of the best evidence,” May said.

Both victims remain unconsciou­s, in a critical but stable condition, while police officer Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey, who was also harmed by the substance, remains in a serious condition.

“He’s well, he’s sat up. He’s not the Nick that I know but of course he’s receiving a high level of treatment,” said Kier Pritchard, head of Wiltshire Police, after visiting Bailey in a hospital intensive care unit.

“He’s very anxious, he’s very concerned.

“He did his very best on that night,” Pritchard said. Theresa May said the police should be given “the time and space to actually conduct their investigat­ion”.

A total of 21 people had been treated in hospital following the incident, he added.

In Parliament, several lawmakers defied Interior Minister Amber Rudd’s plea to avoid speculatio­n about who was responsibl­e for the “brazen and reckless act”. Some called for investigat­ions to be reopened into the deaths of Russian exiles in Britain in recent years.

Rudd urged people to keep a cool head and focus on the Salisbury incident.

“This was attempted murder in the most cruel and public way. We will respond in a robust and appropriat­e manner once we ascertain who was responsibl­e,” Rudd said.

“We are committed to do all we can to bring the perpetrato­rs to justice, whoever they are and wherever they may be.”

Skripal betrayed dozens of Russian agents to British intelligen­ce before his arrest in 2004. He was sentenced to 13 years in prison in 2006, and in 2010 was given refuge in Britain after being exchanged for Russian spies.

The attack has been likened in Britain to the assassinat­ion of ex-KGB agent Alexander Litvinenko, a critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who died in London in 2006 after drinking green tea laced with radioactiv­e polonium-210.

A British public inquiry said

Litvinenko’s murder had probably been approved by Putin and carried out by two Russians, Dmitry Kovtun and Andrei Lugovoy. Lugovoy is an exKGB bodyguard who became an MP.

Both denied responsibi­lity and Russia has refused to extradite them.

Rudd denied that Britain’s response after Litvinenko’s murder had been too soft, effectivel­y sending a message that such crimes could be carried out with impunity.

“We are absolutely robust about any crimes committed on these streets in the UK. There is nothing soft about the UK’s response to any sort of state activity in this country,” she told BBC radio.

In Russia, some media took an almost jocular tone.

“Do not choose England as your next country of residence, whether you are a profession­al traitor to your homeland, or you just hate your country in your free time,” said Kirill Kleimenov, news anchor on Russia’s state-run Channel One, as he introduced an item about the story on the evening news bulletin.

“Something’s not right there, maybe it’s the climate, but in the past few years there have been a lot of strange occurrence­s there with a terrible outcome. People hang themselves, fall out of windows, are poisoned, or crash in helicopter­s in simply industrial quantities.” Amber Cox shovels the porch roof at her home in Auburn, Maine, Thursday, as the second major storm in less than a week moved up the United States’ East Coast, dumping heavy snow and knocking out power to hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses from Pennsylvan­ia to New England.

Hopes for Hong Kong protest votes

Hong Kong’s pro-democracy camp is seeking to regain lost turf in crucial legislativ­e by-elections tomorrow that it hopes will draw protest votes against perceived political screening and creeping control from Communist Party rulers in Beijing. The opposition in the former British colony has lost the power to block most bills in the Legislativ­e Council since six lawmakers, elected by more than 180,000 votes in 2016, were ousted, and activists fear the council will become a rubber-stamp Parliament if the seats are not recaptured. Four of the ejected lawmakers were prodemocra­cy, two pro-independen­ce, a red line for Beijing. Fifteen candidates are running for four of those seats with the results difficult to predict.

 ?? Picture / AP ??
Picture / AP

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