Irish Daily Mail

‘Poisoned’ spy’s girl called for Putin to be jailed

police fear spy was hit with poison liquid which also hospitalis­ed emergency personnel

- By Chris Greenwood news@dailymail.ie

EX-SPY Sergei Skripal may have been ambushed by attackers who sprayed him with poison in the street.

Investigat­ors suspect the Russian army colonel collapsed so quickly because he inhaled the deadly chemical.

Mr Skripal, who gave Russian secrets to Britain, was exposed to a mystery substance at a shopping centre. The 66-year-old colonel and his daughter Yulia, 33, both collapsed and were critically ill in hospital last night.

One line of inquiry is that Yulia is ‘collateral damage’, coming into contact with the substance as she attempted to help him. Last night both were fighting for their lives in hospital.

British Government ministers are understood to be furious at the reckless nature of the suspected assassinat­ion bid in the centre of Salisbury.

Scores of people were milling around the Wiltshire city as milder weather returned after last week’s cold snap.

It is not clear when the couple were confronted, having left a branch of Italian restaurant chain Zizzi between 2pm and 3pm.

At some point they had visited the Bishop’s Mill Pub before they were found on a bench overlookin­g the Avon shortly after 4pm.

Several bystanders went to their aid as Mr Skripal fell into a catatonic state and Yulia appeared to suffer a fit on the ground. Up to ten emergency service workers were also assessed by medical staff after treating the Skripals. One remained in hospital last night.

Some had complained of suffering itchy eyes and difficulty breathing, suggesting some of the mystery poison may have remained in the air.

Their colleagues put on full biohazard suits and respirator­s amid fears they, too, could be struck down by any lingering remains of the chemical.

Police teams removed furniture, including the table and chairs the couple sat at for lunch, for further forensic tests.

Scientists at the secret Porton Down weapons laboratory near Salisbury are working around the clock to identify the fast-acting poison used in the attack.

They have vast experience of handling some of the world’s most deadly biological, chemical and radiologic­al materials.

Toxicologi­sts will examine samples of blood, urine and tissue taken from the victims at Salisbury District Hospital.

A spray-style attack would have disturbing echoes of the assassinat­ion of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s half-brother at Kuala Lumpur airport last year.

Kim Jong-nam was poisoned by VX nerve agent, which was sprayed in his face by two young women who claimed afterwards that they thought it was a prank. Experts have already said it is highly unlikely that a radioactiv­e poison was involved in the attack on the Skripals because of the speed with which they were struck down.

One former radiation biologist said the ‘considerab­le rapidity’ of their decline suggested a chemical source. ‘Decontamin­ation at the scene would also suggest that possibilit­y,’ he added.

‘However, we shouldn’t totally ignore biological contaminat­ion of food or the environmen­t. However, the latter would have caused a wider response from Public Health England and the authoritie­s.’

Former Metropolit­an Police commander Bob Broadhurst said police and health staff will be working in tandem to identify the poison. ‘It overlaps in terms of public safety between the investigat­ive police world and the forensic medical world,’ he said.

‘What was the cause of this illness? Was it a poison, and if so how did he ingest it? Who else is potentiall­y at risk? You will have almost a parallel investigat­ion – detectives and doctors trying to find cause and effect.’

Professor Alastair Hay of Leeds University said it could take some time before the test results are known. ‘Individual­s cannot provide unlimited amounts of blood for testing so investigat­ions will be guided by the clinical team,’ Professor Hay said.

‘Some tests are rapid and some [poison] candidates will be looked at quickly. But if the cause is more unusual, body fluids will require significan­t clean-up preparatio­n before they can be put in an instrument. So this could take a day or several days.’

‘Who else is potentiall­y at risk?’

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