Oman Daily Observer

Spy poisoning: Putin urges ‘common sense’

ONGOING ROW: The crisis has sent the long-difficult relations between Russia and the West plummeting to new lows

-

THE HAGUE: Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday urged “common sense” to prevail in the spy poisoning crisis as London and Moscow faced off in a tense meeting at the world’s chemical weapons watchdog.

Putin’s plea came as Moscow expelled a Hungarian diplomat in a titfor-tat move, just the latest escalation of tensions between Russia and the West since the nerve agent attack on a former Russian double agent a month ago.

“What we expect is that common sense will in the end prevail and there will not be this damage in internatio­nal relations that we have seen recently,” Putin said after summit talks in Ankara.

But at the start of a meeting of the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), London slammed as “perverse” a Russian proposal for a joint probe into the poisoning of ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia.

“We will not agree to Russia’s demand to conduct a joint investigat­ion into the attack in Salisbury because the UK — supported by many other countries — has assessed that it is highly likely that the Russian state is responsibl­e for this attack, and that there is no plausible alternativ­e explanatio­n,” British chemical arms expert John Foggo told the OPCW executive council in The Hague. OPCW experts have already taken samples at the site of the March 4 attack in Salisbury, and they are being analysed in its labs in The Hague, as well as in four other certified laboratori­es.

Britain has said the Skripals and a British police officer were exposed to a Soviet-designed nerve agent called Novichok.

OPCW chief Ahmet Uzumcu told the meeting he expected the results by his team “by early next week.”

“The OPCW team worked independen­tly and is not involved in the national investigat­ion by the UK authoritie­s,” he insisted.

The crisis has sent the long-difficult relations between Russia and the West plummeting to new lows. Both sides have already expelled scores of diplomats.

Russian foreign intelligen­ce chief Sergei Naryshkin warned on Wednesday in a speech in Moscow that both sides must avoid tensions escalating to the dangerous levels of the Cold War.

And he said that accusation­s of Moscow engineerin­g the attack were a “grotesque provocatio­n ... crudely concocted by the British and American security services”.

 ??  ?? Police officers in black protective suits arrive with new equipment in the cordoned off area around The Mill public house, which had been visited by Sergei Skripal, in Salisbury, Britain, on Wednesday. — Reuters
Police officers in black protective suits arrive with new equipment in the cordoned off area around The Mill public house, which had been visited by Sergei Skripal, in Salisbury, Britain, on Wednesday. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman