Las Vegas Review-Journal

Ex-spy’s daughter released from hospital

Yulia Skripal attacked March 4 with her father

- By Gregory Katz The Associated Press

LONDON — The spy saga that has gripped much of Britain since March took a positive turn Tuesday as nerve agent victim Yulia Skripal was released from the hospital, more than a month after she was poisoned with a military-grade nerve agent.

Her father Sergei remains hospitaliz­ed after the poisoning, which Britain says took place on the orders of the Russian government.

“This is not the end of her treatment but marks a significan­t milestone,” said Dr. Christine Blanshard, medical director of Salisbury District Hospital.

She said she would not provide details about Yulia Skripal’s condition for reasons of patient privacy. The 33-year-old has been taken to a secure location.

Blanshard said Sergei Skripal, 66, the apparent target of the attack, is recovering more slowly than his daughter but continues to improve.

“Both patients have responded exceptiona­lly well to the treatment we’ve been providing. But, equally, both patients are at different stages in their recovery,” she said.

She said no date has been set for the elder Skripal’s release from the hospital.

The two were poisoned March 4 in an attack that has led to a prolonged confrontat­ion between Russia and Britain that has revived Cold War tensions. Both were in critical condition for several weeks.

The British government, which accuses Russia of carrying out the attack, is likely to keep details about Yulia Skripal’s location secret, given the sensitivit­y of the case.

If she is well enough, she is likely to be extensivel­y questioned by British security officials and police about her recollecti­on of events leading up to her poisoning.

The Russian Embassy congratula­ted Yulia Skripal on her release in a tweet but said pointedly that Russia needs “urgent proof ” that “what is being done to her is done on her own free will.”

It is not clear where the Skripals will live if they recover enough to resume normal activities. British officials may feel Sergei Skripal would not be safe to live in the open any longer.

Bob Ayers, a security analyst who used to work with the CIA, said it is possible Sergei and Yulia Skripal would be given new identities in Britain or the United States under a program like those used to protect witnesses in high-profile criminal trials.

 ?? Ben Mitchell ?? The Associated Press District Hospital medical director Dr. Christine Blanshard, right, and nursing director Lorna Wilkinson deliver an update Tuesday on the condition of nerve agent poison victims Yulia and Sergei Skripal.
Ben Mitchell The Associated Press District Hospital medical director Dr. Christine Blanshard, right, and nursing director Lorna Wilkinson deliver an update Tuesday on the condition of nerve agent poison victims Yulia and Sergei Skripal.
 ??  ?? Yulia Skripal
Yulia Skripal

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