Gulf News

Clean-up starts in Salisbury

Sites, including a pub and restaurant the Skripals visited before collapsing, remain closed off

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Aclean-up operation in the British city where a former Russian spy was poisoned began yesterday, with officials saying the nerve agent used was delivered in “liquid form” and small quantities.

The attack on ex-double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia on March 4 in Salisbury has damaged relations between Moscow and the West.

The environmen­t ministry, which is in charge of the cleanup, said an area of the cemetery in Salisbury where Skripal’s wife and son are buried was reopened yesterday.

But nine other sites, including a pub and a restaurant the Skripals visited shortly before collapsing, remain closed off.

Counter-terror police are gradually handing the sites over to specialist cleaning teams. The work is expected to take several months.

Testing of sites

Around 190 personnel the operation.

Suspected sites are tested, items which may have been contaminat­ed are removed for chemical cleaning and then retesting, the department said.

The environmen­t ministry’s chief scientific adviser Ian Boyd specialist military are supporting said: “Thanks to detailed informatio­n gathered during the police’s investigat­ion, and our scientific understand­ing of how the agent works and is spread, we have been able to categorise the likely level of contaminat­ion at each site.

The Skripals were found slumped on a bench in Salisbury, having earlier visited a pub and a restaurant.

Sergei Skripal, 66, remains in the city’s hospital, though he is improving rapidly and no longer in a critical condition, doctors said in their last update on April 6.

Yulia Skripal, 33, has been discharged and is continuing her recovery in a safe house.

Moscow vehemently denies any suggestion of involvemen­t.

 ?? AP ?? Police officers guard a cordon around a police tent covering the spot where former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were found critically ill in March in Salisbury, England.
AP Police officers guard a cordon around a police tent covering the spot where former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were found critically ill in March in Salisbury, England.

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