San Francisco Chronicle

3rd suspect under investigat­ion in poisoning of ex-spy

- By Veselin Toshkov Veselin Toshkov is an Associated Press writer.

SOFIA, Bulgaria — The nation plans to investigat­e reports that a third suspect in the nerve agent poisoning of a Russian ex-spy in England allegedly was involved in a 2015 poisoning in Bulgaria, a party official said Sunday.

Tsvetan Tsvetanov of the ruling GERB party said the probe was being coordinate­d with foreign partners. He told Bulgaria’s bTV channel that intelligen­ce officials plan to present evidence on the topic Thursday to a parliament­ary homeland security committee.

“I am certain that the necessary coordinati­on has already been set up between the Bulgarian, British and European authoritie­s on the case and they are working actively on it,” Tsvetanov said.

Britain’s Foreign Office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Investigat­ive group Bellingcat has reported an alleged Russian military intelligen­ce agent arrived in Bulgaria in April 2015, a few days before Bulgarian businessma­n Emilian Gebrev was poisoned by an unidentifi­ed substance.

Gebrev, an arms industry executive, survived but authoritie­s still don’t know who poisoned him.

Bellingcat said on its website the 45-year-old Russian agent traveled under the alias Sergei Vyacheslav­ovich Fedotov and had been “conclusive­ly identified as an agent of Russian military intelligen­ce,” or GRU.

Bellingcat said Fedotov also was suspected of being involved in the Novichok nerveagent poisoning of Russian ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, in the English city of Salisbury. He arrived in Britain two days before the March 2018 attack.

Both Skripals survived after weeks in the hospital and after their release were taken to an undisclose­d location for their safety, the British government has said.

Britain says Russian intelligen­ce agencies had been spying on Skripal and his daughter for at least five years. British officials have blamed the attack on the GRU and charged two Russian suspects. The men traveled under the names Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov.

Russian authoritie­s denied involvemen­t and Moscow refused to extradite the men to Britain.

The Skripal poisonings set off a wave of recriminat­ions between Britain and Moscow, prompting dozens of envoys to be expelled.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States