The Philippine Star

‘Novichok could last 50 years in sealed container’

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LONDON (AP) — The nerve agent Novichok could remain active for 50 years if kept in a sealed container, Britain’s top counterter­rorism police officer said yesterday, adding that he cannot yet “guarantee” there are no traces of the lethal poison in southweste­rn England.

Metropolit­an Police Assistant Police Commission­er Neil Basu told residents of Amesbury Tuesday night that police are searching for the container that held the nerve agent believed to have poisoned two people on June 30.

“I would love to be able to say that we have identified and caught the people responsibl­e and how we are certain there are no traces of nerve agent left anywhere in Wiltshire,” he said.

“But the brutal reality is that I cannot offer you any reassuranc­e or guarantee at this time.”

He said there is so far no definitive forensic proof that the Novichok that poisoned 44-year-old Dawn Sturgess and 45-year-old Charlie Rowley was the same batch used in March against ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia.

Basu said this can only be proved by scientists conducting detailed analysis, but that any other explanatio­n is extremely unlikely.

“This is a very rare substance banned by the internatio­nal community and for there to be two separate, distinct incidents in one small English county is implausibl­e to say the least,” he said.

The nerve agent was produced in the Soviet Union during the Cold War. Britain has accused the Russian state of the attack on the Skripals, a charge denied by the Kremlin.

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