Global Times

British woman dies after nerve agent attack

Russia hits back, denouncing UK for playing ‘dirty political games’

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British police launched a murder inquiry Sunday after a woman died following exposure to the nerve agent Novichok in southwest England, four months after the same type of chemical was used against a former Russian spy in an attack blamed on Moscow.

Prime Minister Theresa May said she was “appalled and shocked” by the death of Dawn Sturgess, a 44-year-old mother of three, and offered her condolence­s to the family.

Sturgess and a man named Charlie Rowley, 45, fell ill last weekend in Amesbury, near the town of Salisbury where former double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were attacked with Novichok in March and have since recovered.

Novichok is a military-grade nerve agent developed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

Britain and its allies accused Russia of trying to kill the Skripals, prompting angry denials and sparking an internatio­nal diplomatic crisis.

Police said they would be led by the evidence but confirmed a link between the Amesbury case and the Salisbury attack was a main line of inquiry.

Interior minister Sajid Javid last week demanded answers from Moscow, saying he would not accept Britain becoming a “dumping ground for poison.”

Russia hit back, denouncing Britain for playing “dirty political games,” trying to “muddy the waters” and “frighten its own citizens.”

“We urge British law enforcemen­t not to get involved in dirty political games,” Russian Foreign Ministry spokespers­on Maria Zakharova told reporters during a daily press conference on Friday.

“This government and its representa­tives will have to apologize to Russia and the internatio­nal community,” she said.

The British couple were believed to have become exposed to Novichok by handling a “contaminat­ed item,” with speculatio­n that it could have been the container used to administer the nerve agent to the Skripals.

However, police and public health officials insist the risk to the wider public remains low.

A police officer was tested for possible exposure to the deadly nerve agent over the weekend but was given the all-clear.

The prime minister said: “Police and security officials are working urgently to establish the facts of this incident, which is now being investigat­ed as a murder.”

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