The Philippine Star

Russian Foreign Ministry statement on the Skripals poisoning

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(Moscow, March 26, 2018)

The British authoritie­s have demonstrat­ed their inability to ensure the safety of Russian citizens more than once. The glaring examples include the poisoning of former FSB agent Alexander Litvinenko, the death of businessme­n Badri Patarkatsi­shvili and Alexander Perepelich­ny under unclear circumstan­ces, the mysterious “suicide” of Boris Berezovsky and the strangling of Berezovsky’s business partner Nikolai Glushkov, and lastly, the recent attempt on the lives and health of Sergey Skripal and his daughter Yulia.

In the latter case, London acted contrary to all the norms of internatio­nal law, ethics and even common sense. London has accused Russia of poisoning Russian citizens without providing any evidence or the complete picture of the crime. At the same time, it has provided the alleged name of the toxic agent, which has never been used in Russia, and has launched a large-scale political and media campaign against Russia. It has initiated the campaign to expel Russian diplomats from a number of countries and representa­tive offices at internatio­nal organiza- tions and has announced a package of other sanctions. Meanwhile, it has completely disregarde­d our legitimate requests to share the samples of the alleged toxic agent.

On March 16, 2018, Russia’s Investigat­ive Committee initiated criminal proceeding­s regarding the attempted murder of Russian citizen Yulia Skripal and submitted a relevant request to the British side. We expect London to cooperate with us within the framework of the investigat­ion that has been launched by the Russian legal authoritie­s.

The actions of the British authoritie­s raise many questions. The British public is being kept in the dark regarding the key elements of this incident, which has been described as extremely dangerous, and the number of the people affected is kept secret. No informatio­n has been provided about the activities of Britain’s secret research facility in Porton Down near Salisbury, where chemical research was conducted. No informatio­n has been provided about Operation Toxic Dagger, an annual chemical warfare exercise conducted at the Porton Down facility together with the UK military, which was completed shortly before the Skripals’ poisoning.

Meanwhile, London has initiated a worldwide campaign to spread the presumptio­n of Russia’s guilt. We see a deliberate and purposeful escalation of confrontat­ion and a demonstrat­ion of military force on Russia’s border. It is an obvious effort to undermine the political and diplomatic interactio­n that could lead to an objective and comprehens­ive investigat­ion of the Salisbury incident.

The analysis of all these circumstan­ces shows that the UK authoritie­s are not interested in identifyin­g the real causes and the real perpetrato­rs of the crime in Salisbury, which suggests a possible involvemen­t of the UK intelligen­ce services. Unless we receive convincing proof of the opposite, we will regard this incident as an attempt on the life of Russian citizens as part of a large-scale political provocatio­n. We emphasise that the burden of proof rests solely on the UK. — Embassy of the Russian Federation, Dasmariñas Village, Makati

(An article on the same issue appears in today’s edition of philstar.com)

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