The Herald

Inquiry into woman fatally poisoned by Novichok nerve agent set to open

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THE public inquiry into how a British woman was fatally poisoned after being exposed to Novichok will start next week, the Government has announced.

Dawn Sturgess died in July 2018 after she unwittingl­y came into contact with the nerve agent on a discarded perfume bottle in Amesbury, Wiltshire.

The UK Government and Scotland Yard believe the Kremlin was responsibl­e for the act, prompting Home Secretary Priti Patel three months ago to order that the inquest into Ms Sturgess’s death be converted into a public inquiry, to better establish the extent of Russian involvemen­t.

It will be chaired by former Supreme Court judge Lord Hughes of Ombersley, it was announced yesterday.

Ms Patel said in a written ministeria­l statement: “The current inquest will be suspended after the establishm­ent of the inquiry. The inquiry will formally start on March 17.”

She added: “This is an important step in ensuring that the family of Dawn Sturgess get the answers they need.”

Although the inquiry will formally begin next week, it is not yet known when and where the first hearing will take place.

Ms Sturgess’ family have had to wait nearly four years for answers as to how she died.

During a hearing last month, at what was intended to be the inquiry’s first sitting, coroner Baroness Heather Hallett said it was “a disappoint­ment” that no judge had been appointed to lead the inquiry.

Ms Sturgess died in hospital after she and partner Charlie Rowley became seriously ill at his home.

It followed the attempted murder of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal, his daughter Yulia and ex-police officer Nick Bailey, who were poisoned in nearby Salisbury in March that year, when members of a Russian military intelligen­ce squad are believed to have smeared the deadly nerve agent on Mr Skripal’s door handle.

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