Chattanooga Times Free Press

UK chemical experts to aid in poison probe

- BY JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — Dozens of khaki-clad troops trained in chemical warfare were deployed on the streets of the usually sleepy English city of Salisbury on Friday as part of the investigat­ion into the nerve-agent poisoning of a former Russian spy and his daughter.

The sight of the soldiers, and forensic experts in bright yellow hazmat suits, added to the increasing­ly surreal scenes in a city best known for its towering medieval cathedral and its proximity to the ancient Stonehenge monument.

Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia, 33, were found unconsciou­s on a bench near the River Avon in the city on Sunday. They remained in critical condition in a local hospital Friday, poisoned with what authoritie­s say is a rare nerve agent.

A police officer who helped investigat­e was in serious condition, and a total of 21 people have received medical treatment.

Skripal, a former Russian military intelligen­ce officer, was convicted in 2006 of spying for Britain and released by Moscow in 2010 as part of a spy swap. The 66-year-old former agent had been living quietly in Salisbury, 90 miles southwest of London.

Counterter­rorism detectives are leading a vast investigat­ion. One line of inquiry is whether the pair were poisoned at Skripal’s modest suburban house before going out for Sunday lunch and a visit to a pub.

On Friday, police called in about 180 marines, soldiers and air force personnel with expertise in chemical weapons, decontamin­ation and logistics to help with the probe and to remove vehicles that might be contaminat­ed. Military vehicles arrived at Salisbury District Hospital, where the victims are being treated, to take away a police car.

Authoritie­s say there is no risk to the general public from the attack. Unlike radioactiv­e poisons, nerve agents dissipate quickly.

Detectives were retracing the Skripals’ movements as they try to discover how the toxin was administer­ed and where it was manufactur­ed.

Authoritie­s cordoned off Skripal’s house, a car, a restaurant, a pub and the cemetery where Skripal’s wife, Lyudmila, is buried and where there is also a memorial headstone for his son, Alexander.

Lyudmila Skripal died of cancer in 2012. Alexander died last year at the age of 43. The cause is unclear: some reports say he died in a car accident while on holiday in Russia, others that he died of liver failure.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Members of the Falcon Squadron, Royal Tank Regiment, at Winterbour­ne Gunner, southern England, conduct final preparatio­n and training before deploying in support of the civil authoritie­s in downtown Salisbury on Friday. British police asked the...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of the Falcon Squadron, Royal Tank Regiment, at Winterbour­ne Gunner, southern England, conduct final preparatio­n and training before deploying in support of the civil authoritie­s in downtown Salisbury on Friday. British police asked the...

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