Khaleej Times

Russians in poisoning case say they were in Britain as tourists

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moscow — Two men accused by London of poisoning former spy Sergei Skripal told Russian media on Thursday they visited the British city of Salisbury as tourists and denied having anything to do with the murder attempt.

Speaking in an interview with the head of the Kremlin-backed RT news network, the pair confirmed they were the men whose pictures British authoritie­s released this month.

British security services had named the men as Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov, but said these were likely to be aliases.

In the 25-minute interview the two suspects said these were their real names but said they did not work for Russia’s military intelligen­ce agency GRU, as Britain claims.

RT said the men sounded distressed and were sweating as they spoke.

The men seemed to be around 40 years old and wore almost identical dark blue jumpers. They looked well-built and Boshirov wore what looks like a red Kabbalah bracelet.

The Kremlin-backed station re-

corded the interview on Wednesday evening, just hours after President Vladimir Putin said Russia had identified the men sought by Britain and urged them to address the media.

“They are civilians,” Putin said, adding there was nothing criminal about them.

Britain on Wednesday accused Russia of “obfuscatio­n and lies.”

The men confirmed they arrived in Britain on March 2 and said they travelled to Salisbury the next day to see the sights. They left after no more than an hour because of poor weather, but returned the following day.

British authoritie­s said the suspects travelled to Salisbury twice to get ready for the attack and then carry it out.

“Friends have been telling us for a long time we should visit this beautiful city,” said the broadshoul­dered Petrov.

“We went there to see Stonehenge, Old Sarum, but we couldn’t do it because there was muddy slush everywhere,” he added, referring to local landmarks.

Britain was undergoing a cold snap at the time. Boshirov, who sported a goatee, denied they knew anything about Skripal or the location of his house.

“We walked around and enjoyed this English Gothic architectu­re,” he said.

They denied trying to kill Skripal and his daughter Yulia with the Novichok nerve agent in Salisbury on March 4, in an attack London believes was sanctioned by the Kremlin. British investigat­ors say the poison was transporte­d in a fake perfume bottle and sprayed onto the handle of Skripal’s door.

“Is it not silly for decent lads to have women’s perfume?” Boshirov asked.

“The customs are checking everything, they would have questions as to why men have women’s perfume in their luggage. We didn’t have it.”

They said they were entreprene­urs but did not want to divulge details that could hurt their business which they said was linked to sports nutritiona­l supplement­s.

They said that they had previously travelled to Europe for business and pleasure. —

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