UK police hunt object that poisoned couple with nerve agent

Fire and Rescue Service personel arrive with safety equipment at the site of a housing estate on Muggleton Road, after it was confirmed that two people had been poisoned with the nerve-agent Novichok, in Amesbury, Britain, July 6, 2018. (Reuters)
Updated 06 July 2018
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UK police hunt object that poisoned couple with nerve agent

  • British police scour sections of Salisbury and Amesbury, searching for a small vial feared to be contaminated with a deadly nerve agent
  • More than 100 officers look for clues to understand how two local people were exposed to Novichok

SALISBURY, United Kingdom: Police on Friday raced to find the object that contaminated a British couple with the Soviet-made Novichok nerve agent in southwestern England where a former Russian spy was poisoned with the same toxin four months ago.
Dawn Sturgess, 44, and Charlie Rowley, 45, fell ill on Saturday in Amesbury, a small town near the city of Salisbury where Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia collapsed on March 4, spreading fear once again among locals.
Police said they had established that the couple, who remain in a critical condition in hospital, were exposed to the nerve agent after “handling a contaminated item.”
They also did not rule out the possibility of more people coming into contact with the poison, which they suspect may have been left over from the attempted murder on the Skripals, although police have yet to determine whether it was the same batch.
“It is rather scary,” local resident Geoffrey, 66, told AFP, as he walked by the canal.
“It is an agent, it is not a gun or a knife that you can find and dispose of. It is something different, it could be on that bench... it makes me worried.”
“It is terrible to think that it happened months ago, and now it starts all over again,” said 82-year-old Madeleine Webb.
“It is the second time already, why not a third time? It’s not funny.”
London blames Russia for the Skripal attack, with interior minister Sajid Javid on Thursday accusing Moscow of using Britain as a “dumping ground for poison.”
Russia has strongly denied the accusation.
“It is completely unacceptable for our people to be either deliberate or accidental targets, or for our streets, our parks, our towns to be dumping grounds for poison,” Javid told parliament.
But Russia quickly 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,” foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told reporters.
“This government and its representatives will have to apologize to Russia and the international community,” she said.
The Skripal incident triggered a major diplomatic crisis, leading to Britain and its allies withdrawing diplomatic staff from Moscow and tit-for-tat expulsions by Russia.
Novichok is a military-grade nerve agent developed by the Soviet Union during the Cold War.
A government scientist told the BBC on Thursday that the agent can be degraded by water and sunlight, meaning it was unlikely the contamination took place in the open, and said that it was so toxic that it could pass through the skin.
Police declared a major incident on Wednesday after Sturgess and then Rowley collapsed on Saturday.
They initially suspected that the couple had consumed a contaminated batch of illegal drugs, saying they had found “paraphernalia” in the house, but tests at nearby defense laboratory Porton Down revealed they had been exposed to Novichok.
A friend of Rowley’s told AFP that he was a drug user and Sturgess lived in a homeless hostel in Salisbury.
Around 100 counter-terror detectives are now working alongside police on the investigation.
Several sites in the city and nearby Amesbury that were visited by the couple have been cordoned off, including a park, a pharmacy, a church and a supermarket.
A fleet of fire trucks and emergency vehicles on Friday arrived at the house in Amesbury where the couple fell ill, with crew wearing gas masks and breathing equipment seen going in and out of the property.
A tent was erected outside the house, as-well as at least five outside the John Baker House homeless shelter in Salisbury, where Sturgess sometimes stayed.
Officials said there was only a “low risk” to the wider public, but urged anyone who had visited the affected sites to wash their clothes and wipe down personal items.
Police said there was no evidence the latest victims had visited any of the sites linked to the Skripals, which have since been decontaminated.
Sam Hobson, a friend of the couple, said he had visited Salisbury with them the day before they fell ill.
Hobson said he went to Rowley’s house on Saturday as Sturgess was being taken to hospital and stayed with him for several hours until he too began to complain of feeling ill.
“He was sweating loads, dribbling, and you couldn’t speak to him,” Hobson said.
“It’s like he was in another world, hallucinating.”


‘Not Winston Churchill’: Trump steps up criticism of UK’s Starmer

Updated 10 sec ago
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‘Not Winston Churchill’: Trump steps up criticism of UK’s Starmer

  • Trump criticized Starmer’s decision to cede sovereignty of the Chagos Islands, home to the Diego Garcia air base, ‌saying that they have ‘been very, very uncooperative with with that stupid island’
  • Donald Trump: ‘France has been great. They’ve all been great. The UK has been much different from others’
LONDON/WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump intensified his criticism of Prime Minister Keir Starmer on Tuesday, ​saying his lack of immediate support for US strikes on Iran showed “this is not Winston Churchill we’re dealing with.” Trump has lashed out at Starmer three times this week after he said neither the British military, or its air bases, were involved in the initial US and Israeli strikes on Tehran that killed Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Starmer told parliament that the government had learnt from its mistakes in backing the US in the 2003 Iraq war, and said any military action must have a “viable, thought-through plan.” He also said he did not believe in “regime change from the skies.” But ‌Starmer has since ‌allowed the US to use UK bases to launch what he ​called ‌limited ⁠and defensive ​strikes ⁠to weaken Tehran’s capabilities, after Iran hit US allies in the region with drones and missiles. On Monday, a British base in Cyprus was hit by a drone that Cypriot officials said was likely launched by Iran-backed Lebanese group Hezbollah, prompting London to send a destroyer and more helicopters with counter-drone technology to the region.
Trump told reporters during a meeting in the Oval Office with German Chancellor Friedrich Merz that he was very disappointed with Britain.
“This is not Winston Churchill that we’re dealing with,” he said, comparing Starmer with Britain’s revered ⁠wartime leader.
Trump also criticized Starmer’s decision to cede sovereignty of the Chagos ‌Archipelago, home to the US-UK air base of Diego Garcia, ‌saying they have “been very, very uncooperative with that stupid island.”

Starmer has ‌been criticized from all sides at home for his decision, with opponents on the left calling ‌for him to condemn the military action while on the right, opposition leaders Kemi Badenoch and Nigel Farage attacked Starmer for failing to back Britain’s key security and intelligence ally.
Britain has long prided itself on its relationship with the US, aided by British leaders such as Churchill, Margaret Thatcher and Tony Blair cultivating strong relationships with their counterparts, ‌Franklin D. Roosevelt, Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush.
Starmer, a center-left former lawyer, surprised his critics when he too struck up a solid relationship ⁠with Trump, but that has ⁠been tested in the last year as the US leader became more combative on a number of fronts. Trump earlier told the Sun newspaper he never thought he would see Britain become a reluctant partner, instead heaping praise on France and Germany.
“This was the most solid relationship of all,” he said. “And now we have very strong relationships with other countries in Europe.”
“France has been great. They’ve all been great. The UK has been much different from others.”
Britain, France and Germany released a joint statement in response to Iranian attacks on Saturday, saying they were in close contact with the US, Israel and partners in the region, and were calling for a resumption of negotiations.
Starmer has defended his response, telling parliament on Monday he had to judge what was in Britain’s national interest. “That is what ​I have done, and I stand by ​it,” he said.
Polling published by YouGov on Tuesday showed people in Britain were opposed to the US strikes on Iran by 49 percent to 28 percent.