Daily Mail

INSULT TO OUR INTELLIGEN­CE

May dismisses Russian TV circus as ‘deeply offensive’ as novichok murder suspects give a bizarre interview

- By Sam Greenhill Chief Reporter

TWO suspected Kremlin assassins were ridiculed yesterday after claiming to have been ordinary tourists desperate to see the Salisbury Cathedral’s magnificen­t ‘123-metre spire’.

The burly pair admitted they were in the city on the day Sergei Skripal was poisoned, but insisted they only went to visit its ‘ famous cathedral’ and nearby Stonehenge.

Their unlikely story was branded ‘lies and blatant fabricatio­n’ by Theresa May last night, who said it ‘insulted the public’s intelligen­ce’ and was deeply offensive to the victims of the chemical attack. Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt added: ‘The last time Russian military claimed to be on holiday was when they invaded Ukraine in 2014.’

The men broke cover eight days after their mugshots were issued by Scotland Yard – which has accused them of attempted murder – and Mrs May told the Commons they were intelligen­ce agents from Russia’s feared GRU.

The men told Kremlin-funded state broadcaste­r Russia Today yesterday they had been on a twoday holiday to Salisbury.

In the stage-managed interview, they admitted ‘ maybe’ they ended up at former double agent Mr Skripal’s suburban home by accident while looking for the cathedral, which has a 400ft spire and is a 25-minute walk in the opposite direction.

They insisted their real names were Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov. The Yard says these are the aliases the GRU hitmen used to travel to Britain on March 2 for their assassinat­ion mission.

They were interviewe­d on camera for 25 minutes by RT’s editor-inchief, who says she offered them cognac to quell their nerves.

The men claimed their lives had been ‘turned upside down’ since being named as suspects.

But the interview shed no light on their background­s and they were not asked to explain why traces of novichok were found in their east London hotel room – 127 miles from the Skripals’ home.

Instead, to global mockery, they told how they flew to Britain

‘We’re afraid of going out’

because friends had urged them to visit ‘wonderful’ Salisbury.

In praising their destinatio­n, Boshirov sounded like he was reciting a Wikipedia page, stating: ‘It’s famous for its 123-metre spire. It’s famous for its clock. It’s the oldest working clock in the world.’

A body-language expert said the men appeared to be reciting ‘guide book monologues’ about Salisbury.

Even prominent Russians were openly ridiculing the pair’s insistence they were not trained killers.

In London, the Prime Minister was scathing of Moscow’s ‘contempt’ for the novichok episode, which nearly killed Mr Skripal, 66, and his daughter Yulia, 33, and claimed the life of Dawn Sturgess, 44, whose partner Charlie Rowley, 45, had unwittingl­y given her the fake bottle of perfume used to carry the nerve agent.

Anti-terror police are understood to ‘stand by everything’ they have said about the two suspects. Intelligen­ce officers know the men’s real names, and sources said they concluded they were GRU hitmen based on solid intelligen­ce which has not been made public.

Mrs May’s official spokesman said: ‘The lies and blatant fabricatio­ns in this interview … are an insult to the public’s intelligen­ce. More importantl­y, they are deeply offensive to the victims and loved ones of this horrific attack. Sadly, it is what we have come to expect.

‘An illegal chemical weapon has been used on the streets of this country. We have seen four people left seriously ill in hospital and an innocent woman has died. Russia has responded with contempt.’ As relations with Moscow worsened, the Russian embassy claimed its diplomats had been ‘banned’ from attending a Conservati­ve Party event for the first time.

Ministers say Vladimir Putin personally ordered the assassinat­ion attempt, but the Russian President has denied all involvemen­t.

In their interview, Petrov and Boshirov told RT they fear the British secret service has a ‘bounty on our heads’.

Boshirov denied the Kremlin had forced them to speak out, and said: ‘We’re afraid of going out, we fear for ourselves, our lives and lives of our loved ones.’ They described themselves as ‘decent lads’ working in the ‘sports nutrition business’.

They said they went to Salisbury twice in two days to try to get to Stonehenge but were thwarted each time by snow. They said they got ‘ drenched’ and ‘freezing’ and on both days stayed for a short period, before heading back to London on the train.

Boshirov confessed: ‘ Maybe we did [approach] Skripal’s house,

but we don’t know where it was located.’

Police say the hitmen went on Saturday March 3 as a dry run before the murder attempt on the Sunday and travelling back to Heathrow and a flight to Moscow that evening.

In Moscow, Sergey Dorenko, of Govorit Moskva radio, said he was ashamed at the ‘clumsy’ interview.

Journalist Oleg Kashin said it had the opposite effect to what Mr Putin had hoped for – and amounted to a ‘confession’ that Britain was right.

 ??  ?? Unreality TV: Boshirov, left, and Petrov try to explain what they were doing in Salisbury
Unreality TV: Boshirov, left, and Petrov try to explain what they were doing in Salisbury
 ??  ?? Clocked: The hitmen on Salisbury CCTV on March 4
Clocked: The hitmen on Salisbury CCTV on March 4
 ??  ?? Landmark: Salisbury Cathedral – pictured a day 123 M
Landmark: Salisbury Cathedral – pictured a day 123 M
 ??  ?? Staged: Interviewe­r Margarita Simonyan of Russia Today
Staged: Interviewe­r Margarita Simonyan of Russia Today
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? before the pair said they tried to visit
before the pair said they tried to visit
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

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