Gulf Times

Skripal suspects say they were in UK as tourists

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Two men accused by London of poisoning former spy Sergei Skripal denied being involved with the murder attempt in a bizarre Russian media interview yesterday that Britain dismissed as “an insult to the public’s intelligen­ce”.

Speaking with the head of the Kremlin-backed RT news network, the pair confirmed that they were the men whose pictures British authoritie­s released this month, and said they were visiting the English city of Salisbury only as tourists.

British security services had named the men as Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov, but said these were likely to be aliases.

In the 25-minute interview, the two men said these were their real names, but said they did not work for Russia’s military intelligen­ce agency GRU, as Britain claims.

RT said the men sounded distressed and were sweating as they spoke.

The men seemed to be around 40 years old and wore almost identical dark blue jumpers.

They looked well-built and Boshirov wore what looked like a red Kabbalah bracelet.

The TV station recorded the interview on Wednesday evening, just hours after President Vladimir Putin said that Russia had identified the men sought by Britain and urged them to address the media.

“They are civilians,” Putin said, adding there was nothing criminal about them.

London believes that Putin personally sanctioned the attack.

Skripal’s attempted assassinat­ion has drawn comparison­s with the poisoning of Kremlin critic Alexander Litvinenko with highly radioactiv­e polonium in London in 2006.

Moscow has refused to extradite the two men Britain suspects of killing Litvinenko, and one of them, Andrei Lugovoi, went on to become a Russian lawmaker.

Yesterday Downing Street called the RT interview “an insult to the public’s intelligen­ce”.

“More importantl­y they are deeply offensive to the victims and loved ones of this horrific attack. Sadly, it’s what we’ve come to expect,” Prime Minister Theresa May’s spokesman said.

Petrov and Boshirov confirmed that they arrived in Britain on March 2 and said they travelled to Salisbury the next day to see the sights.

They left after no more than an hour because of poor weather and heavy snow, but returned to the city the next day – March 4, the day of the attack.

British authoritie­s said the suspects travelled to Salisbury twice to get ready for the attack and then carry it out.

“Friends have been telling us for a long time we should visit this beautiful city,” said the broad-shouldered Petrov.

“We went there to see Stonehenge, Old Sarum, but we couldn’t do it because there was muddy slush everywhere,” he added, referring to local landmarks.

Boshirov, who sported a goatee, denied they knew anything about Skripal or the location of his house.

“We walked around and enjoyed this English Gothic architectu­re,” he said.

The men denied trying to kill Skripal and his daughter Yulia with the Soviet-designed Novichok nerve agent.

British investigat­ors say that the poison was transporte­d in a fake Nina Ricci perfume bottle and sprayed onto the handle of Skripal’s door.

“Is it not silly for decent lads to have women’s perfume?” Boshirov asked. “The customs are checking everything. We didn’t have it.”

They said that they were entreprene­urs but did not want to divulge details that could hurt their business which they said was linked to sports nutritiona­l supplement­s.

They said that they had previously travelled to Europe for business and pleasure.

The pair complained that their lives had become a “nightmare” and they could no longer watch the news and urged journalist­s to leave them alone.

“We’re afraid of going out, we fear for ourselves, our lives and lives of our loved ones,” Boshirov said. “We are tired.”

When RT editor Margarita Simonyan asked the pair why they travelled together, implying they might be a gay couple, the men said that their private lives were off limits to the media.

“This is not an interrogat­ion,” Boshirov said.

Simonyan said that the men had contacted her on her cellphone.

Boshirov and Petrov said they called her because they needed protection and would like an apology from Britain.

The pair said that they had never dealt with the media before and if Putin had not urged them to speak out, they would have recorded a video statement.

Social networks ran amok, with many deriding what they said was a flimsy attempt to cover the tracks.

“The Spy Who Went Home Because It Was Cold,” quipped Twitter user Ben Stanley.

Others suggested that Moscow had essentiall­y thrown its intelligen­ce agents under the bus.

“Unlike the murderers of Litvinenko,” wrote Anders Aslund, a senior fellow at the US think-tank Atlantic Council, “these two men are sent through the meat grinders”.

“How can the GRU allow their obedient officers to be ridiculed like this?” he added.

 ??  ?? A video grab taken from footage by the Kremlin-backed RT news network shows the two Russian nationals who identified themselves as Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov speaking with RT editor Margarita Simonyan in Moscow.
A video grab taken from footage by the Kremlin-backed RT news network shows the two Russian nationals who identified themselves as Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov speaking with RT editor Margarita Simonyan in Moscow.

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