Cape Argus

Reprisal imminent, promises Russia

23 diplomats expelled from Britain over a poison attack on double agent

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RUSSIA warned yesterday it would retaliate soon for Britain’s expulsion of 23 diplomats over a nerve toxin attack on a former Russian double agent.

Britain says Russia is responsibl­e for using the Novichok nerve agent against Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, in the English city of Salisbury. They have been critically ill in hospital since they were found on March 4.

Russia denies any involvemen­t and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov accused London of behaving in a “boorish” way, adding that this was partly due to the problems Britain faces over its planned exit from the EU next year.

Lavrov said Russia’s response would come “very soon”.

But he conveyed it to British officials first in an apparent contradict­ion of an earlier report by state news agency RIA that said Lavrov had promised to expel British diplomats.

In the biggest expulsion of Russian diplomats from London since the Cold War, Prime Minister Theresa May on Wednesday gave 23 Russians, whom she said were spies working under diplomatic cover, a week to leave London.

“These are all signs of a provocatio­n against our country. The position of the British side seems absolutely irresponsi­ble to us,” Kremlin spokespers­on Dmitry Peskov said.

“We insist that Russia has no connection to what happened in Great Britain.”

In London, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson ratcheted up the rhetoric against Russia, accusing it of glorying in the attack on Skripal, which he described as a way of scaring anyone who stood up to President Vladimir Putin.

Johnson said the evidence of Russian guilt was “overwhelmi­ng”, because only Moscow had access to the poison used and a motive for harming Skripal.

“There is something in the kind of smug, sarcastic response that we’ve heard from the Russians that to me betokens their fundamenta­l guilt,” Johnson told the BBC.

“They want to simultaneo­usly deny it and yet at the same time glory in it,” he added.

Johnson said the attack was a way for Putin to send a message to anyone considerin­g taking a stand against it that “You do that, you are going to die”.

Skripal, a former agent of the GRU, Russia’s military intelligen­ce agency, betrayed dozens of Russian agents to Britain before being arrested in 2004.

He was freed as part of a spy swop deal in 2010 and took refuge in Britain.

At home, the British government has been under pressure from lawmakers and the media to show it is getting tough on Russia, with some experts saying that despite the rhetoric the response did not go far enough to bother Putin.

Johnson defended Britain’s response and suggested that there could be further consequenc­es for the Russians close to Putin.

“We will go after the money… Actually we are going after the money,” he said, adding that the National Crime Agency and Economic Crimes Unit were investigat­ing a wide range of individual­s. He declined to give details, citing legal reasons.

Johnson also said he had been heartened by strong expression­s of support from the US and other allies – although it remains unclear whether there will be a co-ordinated internatio­nal response to the Novichok attack.

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