Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Poisoned Russian woman exits hospital

- MICHAEL WOLGELENTE­R AND RICHARD PEREZ-PENA

LONDON — Yulia Skripal has been released from a hospital in southern England, officials said Tuesday, five weeks after she and her father, a former Russian spy, were poisoned with a nerve agent that left them fighting for their lives and raised tensions between Russia and the West.

The poisoning of Skripal and her father, Sergei Skripal, has had ramificati­ons far beyond the cathedral city of Salisbury, England, where it took place, prompting a confrontat­ion between Russia and the West that escalated.

Britain has blamed Moscow for the poisonings, an accusation that the Kremlin has continuall­y mocked and rejected, and the dispute precipitat­ed a series of expulsions of diplomats between the two countries and beyond, as Britain’s allies rallied to its side.

Britain says the March 4 poisoning involved a rare class of the military-grade nerve agent Novichok, which is widely believed to have been developed in Soviet laboratori­es, leaving the Skripals in critical condition.

Yulia Skripal emerged from critical condition almost two weeks ago, and her father’s condition was raised to stable from critical Friday.

“Yulia has asked for privacy from the media, and I want to reiterate that request,” Dr. Christine Blanshard, medical director of Salisbury District Hospital, told reporters Tuesday. “This is not the end of her treatment, but marks a significan­t milestone.”

Though Sergei Skripal, 66, “is recovering more slowly than Yulia,” Blanshard said, “we hope that he, too, will be able to leave hospital in due course.”

She did not comment on reports in the British news media that Yulia Skripal, 33, had been released Monday. It was not immediatel­y clear where the Skripals might go; investigat­ors have sealed off Sergei Skripal’s house in Salisbury, and investigat­ors say the nerve agent was most likely applied to its front door.

One other person is known to have been sickened by the toxin — Detective Sgt. Nick Bailey, who went to the house at the start of the investigat­ion. He was released from the hospital March 22.

Yulia Skripal, who lives in Russia, was visiting her father when they were poisoned, and it is not clear whether she will return to Russia.

Russian officials say they have been improperly denied access to her, but the British police said last week that Yulia Skripal was aware of the Russian offer to visit and help, and that she had turned it down.

On Tuesday, the Russian Embassy in London wrote on Twitter: “We congratula­te Yulia Skripal on her recovery. Yet we need urgent proof that what is being done to her is done on her own free will.”

The Sunday Times of London, citing anonymous sources, has reported that senior intelligen­ce officials in Britain were talking to their counterpar­ts at the CIA about sending the Skripals to the United States. The two Russians would be provided with new identities, part of a broader effort to keep them safe in case there should be another attempt on their lives.

The Russian Embassy seemed to acknowledg­e that possibilit­y with another post on Twitter later Tuesday, again demanding proof that Yulia Skripal was acting of her own accord.

“Secret resettleme­nt of Mr and Ms Skripal, barred from any contact with their family will be seen as an abduction or at least as their forced isolation,” the post read.

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