Times Colonist

Poisoned daughter better, dispute worsens

- DANICA KIRKA and EDITH M. LEDERER

LONDON — The daughter of a former Russian spy poisoned by a nerve agent said Thursday in her first public comment that she’s recovering, but the internatio­nal furor over the attack escalated as Russia told the United Nations Moscow assumes “with a high degree of probabilit­y” that the intelligen­ce services of other countries are behind it.

Britain’s UN Ambassador Karen Pierce shot back that Russia has come up with 24 theories on who bears responsibi­lity for the poisoning of an ex-spy and his daughter in England, but the United Kingdom has only one — that it’s highly likely Russia was responsibl­e.

Yulia Skripal, 33, said in a statement released by British police that her “strength is growing daily” and she expressed gratitude to those who came to her aid when she and her father, Sergei, were found unconsciou­s on a bench a month ago.

“I am sure you appreciate that the entire episode is somewhat disorienta­ting, and I hope that you’ll respect my privacy and that of my family during the period of my convalesce­nce,” she said.

The hospital in the English city of Salisbury confirmed that Yulia’s health has improved, while her 66-year-old father, Sergei Skripal, remains in critical condition.

At the United Nations, the confrontat­ion between Russia and Britain and more than two dozen Western allies intensifie­d. More than 150 Russian diplomats have been expelled.

Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia claimed that Russia was the victim of a hasty, sloppy and ill-intentione­d defamation campaign by Britain and its allies.

Moscow assumes “with a high degree of probabilit­y” that the intelligen­ce services of other countries are likely responsibl­e for the incident, Nebenzia said.

“Everything confirms this is a co-ordinated, very well-planned campaign” intended “to discredit and even delegitimi­ze Russia.”

Nebenzia did not name the intelligen­ce services that Russia suspects, but said their goal is to accuse Moscow of using “a horrible, inhumane weapon, of concealing the arsenal of this substance,” of violating the Chemical Weapons Convention, and putting in question Russia’s “role not only in finding a solution in Syria, but anywhere else.”

He also warned: “We have told our British colleagues that you are playing with fire and you will be sorry.”

Britain’s Pierce said Russia’s 24 theories for the attack include blaming it on terrorists and saying Britain wanted to distract from Brexit, its departure from the European Union.

After trading bards about Sherlock Holmes, Nebenzia and Pierce resorted to nonsensica­l fantasy with the Russian ambassador reading a passage from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland and the British ambassador responding with a witty passage from the book that says: “I believe in as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”

Adding to the intrigue was a recording aired Thursday by Russian state Rossiya TV of a purported phone call between Yulia Skripal and her cousin in Russia. In the call, Yulia Skripal allegedly said she and her father were both recovering and in normal health, and that her father’s health was not irreparabl­y damaged.

Rossiya TV said Skripal’s niece, Viktoria, who lives in Moscow, gave it the purported recording, although the broadcaste­r said it could not verify its authentici­ty.

Moscow has steadfastl­y hammered away at Britain’s account of what befell the Skripals on March 4, especially the claim that their exposure to a Novichok nerve agent developed by the Soviet Union meant the attack was carried out by Russia.

During the Security Council meeting, Nebenzia questioned the British government’s claims of Russian responsibi­lity by posing a series of questions.

He asked why the British policeman was affected by the nerve agent immediatel­y when it took four hours for Skripal and his daughter to be affected. He asked what antidotes for exposure to Novichok the Skripals were given, where the Skripals were for four hours without cellphones on the day of the attack, and what happed to cats and guinea pigs in the Skirpal’s house.

Russia has said it never produced Novichok and completed the destructio­n of its chemical arsenals under internatio­nal control last year. Nebenzia insisted that Britain is required to allow Russia to co-operate in the investigat­ion.

“Great Britain refuses to cooperate with us on the pretext that the victim does not co-operate with the criminal,” he said.

“A crime was committed on British territory, possibly a terrorist act, and it is our citizens who are the victims.”

Moscow has sent home an equal number of envoys — 150 — in an all-out diplomatic war unseen even at the height of the Cold War.

As part of the diplomatic row, Russia last week ordered 60 U.S. diplomats to leave the country by Thursday in retaliatio­n for Washington’s expulsion of the same number of Russians.

Three buses believed to be carrying expelled American diplomats left the U.S. Embassy in Moscow early Thursday after loading their luggage on trucks. Some toted pet carriers.

Ahead of the UN meeting, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov described the British accusation­s against Moscow as a mockery of internatio­nal law.

He sarcastica­lly likened the British accusation­s to the queen from Alice in Wonderland urging “sentence first — verdict afterward.”

 ??  ?? Vassily Nebenzia, Russian ambassador to the United Nations, holds up a copy of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as he speaks during a Security Council meeting on the situation between Britain and Russia on Thursday at the UN.
Vassily Nebenzia, Russian ambassador to the United Nations, holds up a copy of Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland as he speaks during a Security Council meeting on the situation between Britain and Russia on Thursday at the UN.

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