BFF-36 British police probe new Novichok nerve agent case

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BRITAIN-HEALTH-POLICE-INVESTIGATION,WRAP

British police probe new Novichok nerve agent case

SALISBURY, United Kingdom, July 5, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – British police
scrambled on Thursday to determine how a couple were exposed to the same
nerve agent used on a former Russian spy earlier this year, leaving them
critically ill.

The couple were taken ill on Saturday in the village of Amesbury, close to
the city of Salisbury, where former double agent Sergei Skripal and his
daughter Yulia were found slumped on a bench on March 4 in an incident that
sparked a diplomatic crisis with Russia.

“The possibility that these two investigations might be linked is clearly a
line of enquiry for us,” said Neil Basu, head of Britain’s counter-terrorism
police force.

Police announced late Wednesday that tests on the couple, named locally as
44-year-old woman Dawn Sturgess and 45-year-old man Charlie Rowley, revealed
they had been exposed to Novichok, but could not say whether it was the same
batch used on the Skripals.

Novichok is a military-grade nerve agent developed by the Soviet Union
during the Cold War.

The exposure of an apparently random British couple to the nerve agent is
spreading fear through the normally quiet city in southwest England once
again.

– ‘Low risk’ –

Interior minister Sajid Javid is to chair an emergency cabinet meeting on
Thursday, as counter-terrorism police lead the investigation into the
incident.

Basu also insisted that there “remains a low risk to the general public,”
saying “we’re satisfied that if anyone was exposed to that level of nerve
agent by now they would be showing symptoms.”

However, many questions remain over the source of the contamination and why
tests were not conducted on the couple until Monday, two days after they were
taken ill.

“The priority for the investigation team now is to establish how these two
people have come into contact with this nerve agent,” Basu said.

“We have no idea what may have contained the nerve agent at this time,” he
said, urging members of the public not to touch anything if they did not know
what it was.

Basu said there was no evidence to suggest that the couple “were targeted
in any way”.

– ‘Hallucinating’ –

Local man Sam Hobson, 29, told AFP he was a friend of the pair and had
spent time with them as they fell ill.

“I came around Charlie’s house in the morning and there were loads of
ambulances outside, and his girlfriend was getting taken away,” he said.

“She was complaining of a headache in the morning and she went into the
bathroom to have a bath and he heard a thump and she was in there having a
fit, foam coming out of her mouth.”

She was hospitalised at around 0915 GMT, and Hobson then joined Rowley as
he went into the village to visit a pharmacy and get food from a church, when
Rowley complained of feeling unwell.

“He was sweating loads, dribbling, and you couldn’t speak to him,” Hobson
said.

“He was making funny noises and he was rocking backwards and forwards and
there was no response from him, he didn’t even know I was there. It’s like he
was in another world, hallucinating.”

Hobson said he called the ambulance at around 1430 GMT.

Hobson also said that the couple had visited Salisbury on Friday,
speculating that “they must have touched something that was contaminated.”

Basu said there was no evidence the man and the woman had “recently visited
any of the sites that were decontaminated” after the poisoning of the
Skripals.

Police had initially assumed that the two had consumed contaminated drugs.

But samples from both patients were sent to Porton Down defence laboratory
on Monday “due to concern over the symptoms,” Basu said.

Both are still in a critical condition and are at Salisbury District
Hospital — the same facility where the Skripals were treated.

Police launched two helplines for those worried about possible
contamination.

Police called for calm but also said that anyone who had visited any of the
five sites that the man and the woman went to on Friday and Saturday should
wash clothing worn at the time and wipe down personal items.

The sites, which have now been cordoned off, are a park and a homeless
hostel in Salisbury, as well as a pharmacy, church and the house in Amesbury.

Chemistry professor Andrea Sella said that nerve agents like Novichok were
“designed to be quite persistent”, suggesting it was possible the couple had
come into contact with the original batch.

– ‘Such a quiet place’ –

Local resident Natalie Smyth, 27, told AFP she saw fire engines and
ambulances arrive at the house on Saturday.

“It is so strange, it is such a quiet place,” she said, adding that the
emergency services personnel were wearing protective suits.

Skripal, 67, and his 33-year-old daughter Yulia, who was visiting from
Moscow, were treated for an extended period of time before being released
from hospital.

The police said they suspected the nerve agent may have been smeared on a
front door handle in liquid form.

Moscow has rejected British accusations of involvement in the Skripal
poisoning, which sparked a diplomatic crisis that saw Russia and the West
expelling dozens of diplomats in tit-for-tat moves.

BSS/AFP/MRI/1447 hrs