UK experts cannot confirm source of poison in Skripal attack

British military centre says it cannot say if the nerve agent was produced in Russia

Members of the emergency services pictured at work following the poisoning of  former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury, England. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images
Members of the emergency services pictured at work following the poisoning of former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury, England. Photograph: Ben Stansall/AFP/Getty Images

The head of Britain's military research centre said on Tuesday it was unable yet to say whether the military-grade nerve agent used to poison a Russian former spy last month had been produced in Russia.

"We were able to identify it as Novichok, to identify that it was military-grade nerve agent," Gary Aitkenhead, chief executive of the Defence Science and Technology Laboratory at Porton Down in England, told Sky News.

“We have not identified the precise source, but we have provided the scientific info to government, who have then used a number of other sources to piece together the conclusions you have come to.”

However, he confirmed the substance required “extremely sophisticated methods to create, something only in the capabilities of a state actor”.

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He added: “We are continuing to work to help to provide additional information that might help us get closer to [the source] but we haven’t yet been able to do that.”

Moscow has denied being behind the attack on Sergei Skripal and his daughter in the southern English city of Salisbury on March 4th.

After the incident, which was the first known use of a military-grade nerve agent on European soil since the second World War, Britain blamed Russian president Vladimir Putin, and the West expelled about 130 Russian diplomats.

Other methods

Mr Aitkenhead said the British government had “other inputs” it could use to determine the origin of the nerve agent, some of them intelligence-based.

“It is our job to provide the scientific evidence of what this particular nerve agent is – we identified that it is from this particular family and that it is a military grade, but it is not our job to say where it was manufactured,” Mr Aitkenhead added.

He reiterated that the substance could not have come from Porton Down.

Russia's EU ambassador Vladimir Chizhov noted in an interview with the BBC last month that the British research lab is only 11km from Salisbury, insinuating that it may have been the source of the nerve agent.

Mr Skripal’s daughter Yulia is getting better after spending three weeks in a critical condition following the attack at her father’s home in Salisbury, the hospital where she is being treated said last Thursday.

Her father remains in a critical but stable condition. – Reuters