The third man: UK charges another Russian for nerve attack on double
agent
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[September 21, 2021]
By Michael Holden
LONDON (Reuters) -British police said on
Tuesday a third Russian had been charged in absentia with the 2018
Novichok murder attempt on former double agent Sergei Skripal, saying
they could also now confirm the three suspects were military
intelligence operatives.
The attack on Skripal, who sold Russian secrets to Britain, caused one
of the biggest rows between Russia and the West since the Cold War,
leading to the tit-for-tat expulsion of dozens of diplomats after
Britain pointed the finger of blame at Moscow.
Russia has rejected any involvement, casting the accusations as
anti-Russian propaganda.
Skripal and his daughter Yulia were found unconscious, slumped on a
public bench in the southern English city of Salisbury in March 2018,
and they, along with a police officer who went to his house, were left
critically ill in hospital from exposure to the military-grade nerve
agent.
A woman later also died from Novichok poisoning after her partner found
a counterfeit perfume bottle which police believe had been used to
smuggle the poison into the country.
In September 2018, British prosecutors charged two Russians, then
identified by the aliases Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov, with
conspiracy to murder Skripal and the attempted murder of Yulia and the
officer, Nick Bailey.
Dean Haydon, the UK's Senior National Coordinator for Counter Terrorism
Policing, said prosecutors had now authorised them to charge a third
man, Sergey Fedotov, who was aged about 50, with the same offences.
[L8N2QN2MN]
Haydon also said Petrov and Boshirov were really named Alexander Mishkin
and Anatoliy Chepiga, and that Fedotov's true identity was Denis Sergeev.
SKRIPAL PLOT
They were a three-man GRU team which had carried out operations on
behalf of the Russian state in other countries, and there had been
discussions with Bulgaria and the Czech Republic, he said, the first
time that the police had categorically identified them as Russian spies.
"We can't go into the detail of how, but we have the evidence that links
them to the GRU," Haydon told reporters, describing them as
highly-trained. "All three of them are dangerous individuals."
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A police officer stands at a cordon around the bench where former
Russian intelligence agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia
were found after they were poisoned, in Salisbury, Britain March 14,
2018. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
As with the other two Russians, British police had
obtained an arrest warrant for Fedotov and they were applying for
Interpol notices against him, he said.
All three men were now believed to be in Russia, with whom Britain
has no extradition treaty and the Russian authorities had so far
offered no cooperation, Haydon added.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson's spokesman said the issue
would be raised with the Russian ambassador to London.
The police announcement comes on the same day that the European
Court of Human Rights ruled that Russia was responsible for the 2006
killing of ex-KGB officer Alexander Litvinenko, who was poisoned at
a London hotel with Polonium 210, a rare radioactive isotope.
British police say Petrov and Boshirov carried out the Skripal
attack, while Fedotov met them several times over the weekend of
March 2-4 when the poisoning occurred.
After they were accused by Britain, Boshirov and Petrov appeared on
Russian TV to say they were tourists who had travelled to Salisbury
to do some sightseeing.
"There's the famous Salisbury Cathedral. It's famous not only in
Europe, but in the whole world. It's famous for its 123 metre-spire,"
Boshirov said.
(additional reporting by Elizabeth Piper and Kylie MacLellanEditing
by Guy Faulconbridge and Peter Graff)
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