Business Day

Russian poison suspect named

Investigat­ive group identifies him as doctor working for intelligen­ce

- Agency Staff

One of the two suspects behind the poisoning of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal in Britain was an intelligen­ce operative who was personally decorated as a hero by President Vladimir Putin in 2014, investigat­ive group Bellingcat said on Tuesday.

The site said on Monday that the man, who used the alias “Alexander Petrov”, was in fact Alexander Mishkin, a trained military doctor employed by Moscow’s GRU military intelligen­ce service.

Bellingcat founder Eliot Higgins and researcher Christo Grozev told reporters at an event in the British parliament on Tuesday that they discovered Mishkin had taken part in undercover operations in Ukraine and the breakaway republic of Transnistr­ia.

Higgins and Grozev said that Mishkin was made a Hero of the Russian Federation by Putin in the autumn of 2014.

People familiar with his family believed it was awarded for activities “either in Crimea or in relation to (former Ukrainian president Viktor) Yanukovych”, according to their report.

A popular uprising in Ukraine ousted the Moscowback­ed Yanukovych, who fled the country in February 2014, and Russia annexed the Ukrainian peninsula of Crimea a month later.

The investigat­ive group has previously identified GRU colonel Anatoly Chepiga as the other suspect behind the March poisoning attack and said that he too had received Russia’s highest award the same year in a secret ceremony in the Kremlin.

The two men are accused by British authoritie­s of attempting to murder Skripal and his daughter Yulia with the Sovietmade nerve agent Novichok in the city of Salisbury in southwest England.

“The findings of this investigat­ion by Bellingcat add possibly material context to the mission of the two GRU officers to Salisbury,” the report concluded.

“The inclusion of a trained military doctor on the team implies that the purpose of the mission has been different than informatio­n gathering or other routine espionage activities.”

Using open-source records such as leaked residentia­l, telephone and vehicle databases, the Bellingcat probe found Mishkin was born in the remote village of Loyga in northern Russia in 1979.

He graduated in 2003 or 2004 from the Russian military’s medical academy in St Petersburg, where he specialise­d in “deep underwater physiology”.

The researcher­s said that he was recruited by the GRU “at some point before 2003” and moved to Moscow in around 2009 where he adopted the identity of Alexander Petrov.

Bellingcat said it reached out to hundreds of fellow graduates from the academy, and two recalled Mishkin, but added that all of the class had been contacted recently and told not to speak about him.

In contrast to Chepiga, Mishkin’s cover identity retained most of his authentic biographic­al characteri­stics, such as the same birth date and first names of his parents.

Bellingcat said it obtained incomplete border crossing records showing Mishkin travelled under his undercover persona of Petrov multiple times to Ukraine between 2010 and 2013.

They also showed he often crossed by car back and forth from Transnistr­ia, where he stayed for short periods of time.

Bellingcat said its Russian investigat­ive partner, The Insider, sent a reporter to the village of Loyga, where at least seven residents recognised photos of Petrov as “our local boy” Mishkin.

The journalist heard that his grandmothe­r had shown many villagers a photograph of Putin shaking hands with Mishkin.

“The source said the grandmothe­r treasures this photo and does not show it to everyone, and never lets anyone else hold it,” the report said. Bellingcat added the reporter was not able to talk directly to the grandmothe­r or see the photograph.

Putin insisted last month that the two men identified by British police as being behind the Skripals’ poisoning were not members of the GRU.

“They are civilians, of course,” he said, while his spokesman Dmitry Peskov labelled Bellingcat’s identifica­tion of the first suspect as Chepiga “fake news.”

 ??  ?? Eliot Higgins, founder of online investigat­ion group Bellingcat, speaks to the media on College Green in London on Tuesday after making a presentati­on in parliament on their investigat­ion into the suspects of the Sergei Skripal poisoning. AFP
Eliot Higgins, founder of online investigat­ion group Bellingcat, speaks to the media on College Green in London on Tuesday after making a presentati­on in parliament on their investigat­ion into the suspects of the Sergei Skripal poisoning. AFP

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