Third man involved in poisoning Skripal
salisbury February 8, 2019 09:32Research collective Bellingcat says that a third suspect was involved in the poisoning of the Russian old double-spy Sergej Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, England. The…
Research collective Bellingcat says that a third suspect was involved in the poisoning of the Russian old double-spy Sergej Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury, England. The…
Cyber attacks can be taken quickly against people or organizations involved in cyber attacks. At their summit in Brussels, the EU heads of government commissioned a sanction system to be developed. The Netherlands, the United Kingdom and a few other countries had insisted on this.
The journalistic research network Bellingcat says he has discovered the identity of 'Alexander Yevgenyevich Petrov', one of the two suspects in the Skripal case. It was about Aleksandr Yevgenyhich Mishkin, military doctor of the Russian military intelligence service GROe.
The Kremlin no longer wants to respond to 'discussions in the media' about the identity of two suspects in the Skripal case, the former spy who survived a murder attempt in Salisbury. The suspects declared themselves to be businessmen who have nothing to do with the case, but according to Bellingcat research network they actually work for the Russian military intelligence service GROe.
Justice in Switzerland wants to prosecute two Russians to carry out 'a cyber attack' on the world anti-doping agency WADA in Lausanne. In 2016, WADA itself reported that a large batch of medical data from athletes had been captured in a cyber-burglary.
The couple who got unwell in the British city of Salisbury on Sunday did not come into contact with the nerve gas Novitsjok. That's what the police said in a statement.
The two Russians who are suspected of the murder attempt on the former double spy Sergej Skripal and his daughter, according to Russia, have nothing to do with Vladimir Putin or the Kremlin. A spokesperson for the Kremlin told Interfax news agency.
The journalistic research network Bellingcat has found, in cooperation with The Insider Russia, indications that the suspects in the Skripal case do have links with the Russian secret service.
The Kremlin would seriously consider a British request to allow the two men suspected of the poison-murder attempt at Salisbury. So far, however, London has not reported.
This spring two Russian spies were arrested in The Hague. They were on their way to the Spiez laboratory in Switzerland, which investigated the poison gas attack on Sergei Skripal and his daughter, as did the poison gas attacks in Syria.
Canada, Germany, France, Great Britain and the US have said in a joint statement that the attack in March in England on the Russian ex-agent Skripal 'almost certainly happened with permission of a high level.' This has the British Prime Minister Theresa May, British media reported.
The British justice suspects two Russians that they have tried to kill the former double spy Sergey Skripal and his daughter Yulia. The two were poisoned with the poison gas novitsjok in the town of Salisbury. They barely survived.
The nerve poison that recently killed a woman in the English city of Amesbury is chemically identical to the novitsjok that was used for the assassination attempt on the former Russian double spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Julia. This is evident from the research that the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) in The Hague has done at the request of the British authorities. The report was presented Tuesday.
Russia has reacted angrily to the 'draconian' sanctions announced by the United States. The Russian embassy in the US mentions the accusation that Moscow is responsible for an attack with the nerve gas Novitsjok 'far-fetched.'
The British police would have in mind the perpetrators of the poisonous attack in Salisbury. It would be two Russians who acted on behalf of the Kremlin.
Reports that the British police have identified Russian suspects who were behind an attack with poison on a Russian ex-spy in Salisbury are nonsense. This is what the British Secretary of Security, Ben Wallace, said in a reaction to the news brought in Britain.
The British police have found a bottle with the highly toxic substance Novitsjok. This happened in the home of Charlie Rowley, one of the two people who became unwell at the end of June through contact with the substance. The other, the 44-year-old Dawn Sturgess, has since passed away.
The British Salisbury was shaken again on Thursday by an incident that may have to do with the nerve gas Novitsjok. A man got sick near the restaurant where ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Julia dined before their poisoning.
The 45-year-old Briton who got infected with the nerve gas Novitsjok last week is on the mend. That made the British police known.
The British police commenced a murder investigation after the death of a 44-year-old woman who was infected with novitsjok. A senior police official called it 'shocking and repulsive' that a British citizen died after exposure to the nerve gas.
The 44-year-old English woman who became infected with the nerve gas Novitsjojk last week has died. That made the British police known.
A policeman was hospitalized in Salisbury in the south of England, because he probably came into contact with the chemical weapon novitsjok. This was reported by the press agency Press Association.
At the place where two people were seriously injured by poisoning with nerve gas, four agents in protective clothing investigate how the couple could come into contact with the nerve gas Novitsjok. That is the same nerve gas that the Russian ex-spy Sergej Skripal and his daughter were poisoned in March.
The British police assume that the couple who came into contact with the nerve gas Novichok was not the target of a conscious attack. According to Secretary of State for Security Ben Wallace, the police assume a form of contamination with the nerve gas. This was what Wallace said on Sky television Thursday morning.
The British government has called on Russia to clarify the poison novitsjok that has re-emerged in the south of England. The latest incident in which a British couple is hospitalized in a critical condition follows the poisoning in March of a Russian ex-spy Sergej Skripal and his daughter. The nerve gas Novitsjok was once developed in the Soviet Union as a weapon of mass destruction.
The two 40-year-olds who ended up in hospital in the vicinity of the British town of Salisbury on Saturday after coming into contact with a toxic substance, appear to have been poisoned with nerve gas. This happened to the Russian ex-doublespion Sergej Skripal and his daughter.
In the English Amesbury, the police have raised the alarm after an unknown substance put two people in the hospital. Parts of the town and the nearby Salisbury where the husband and wife have been, have been deposed. That writes The Guardian.
For the first time since NATO sent Russian diplomats away because of the attack with nerve gas on the former double spy Sergej Skripal and his daughter Yoelia in Salisbury, both parties have again held political consultations. The so-called NATO-Russia Council met at Ambassador level at NATO headquarters in Brussels on Thursday.
Yulia Skripal survived an assassination attempt for which the British authorities hold the Russians responsible. Yet the daughter of one of the most famous Russian double spies says that she wants 'back in time' to her homeland despite the attempt to poison her. 'The fact that nerve gas has been used is shocking. My life has been turned upside down. '
The South English shopping center where the former Russian double-spy Sergej Skripal became unconscious after March 4, after being bombarded with poison, will finally be open again next weekend after more than eleven weeks.