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UK: Nerve agent that poisoned spy was in liquid form

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UK: Nerve agent that poisoned spy was in liquid form
News

News

UK: Nerve agent that poisoned spy was in liquid form

2018-04-18 12:47 Last Updated At:18:06

The nerve agent used on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia was delivered in liquid form, British officials said Tuesday, as they revealed it will take months to clean up the toxic trail the poison left around the city of Salisbury.

FILE - In this Wednesday, March 7, 2018 file photo, police officers guard a cordon around a police tent covering the the spot where former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter were found critically ill Sunday following exposure to an "unknown substance" in Salisbury, England.  (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, File)

FILE - In this Wednesday, March 7, 2018 file photo, police officers guard a cordon around a police tent covering the the spot where former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter were found critically ill Sunday following exposure to an "unknown substance" in Salisbury, England.  (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, File)

The U.K. Environment Department said nine sites need "specialist cleaning," including a restaurant visited by the Skripals on March 4, the day they were found unconscious on a park bench in the city in southwest England.

About 190 specially trained troops are assisting environmental, health and defense officials with the cleanup, it said.

"Work to clean each site will involve a process of testing, removal of items which may have been contaminated, chemical cleaning and retesting," the agency said in a statement, adding the effort will take "a number of months."

British officials say the Skripals were poisoned with a military-grade nerve agent that was smeared on a door handle at Sergei Skripal's house.

Father and daughter were hospitalized for weeks in critical condition. Yulia Skripal was released last week from Salisbury District Hospital, where her father continues to be treated.

British officials say the Russian government was behind the attack using a Soviet-developed type of nerve agent known as Novichok. The international chemical weapons watchdog, the OPCW, has confirmed that a Novichok agent "of high purity" was used, although it has not identified where it was made.

Russia denies involvement in the attack and has accused Britain of failing to share its evidence.

The poisoning has sparked a Cold War-style diplomatic crisis between Russia and the West, including the expulsion of hundreds of diplomats from the two sides.

LONDON (AP) — Britain ’s Queen Camilla on Wednesday spoke publicly for the first time about her personal experience of indecent assault, saying that speaking out was one way she could use her royal platform to shine a light on the epidemic of violence against women.

Camilla, who has made fighting domestic abuse one of her signature causes, recalled fending off a man who attacked her on a train in the 1960s when she was a teenager.

“I was reading my book, and you know, this boy, man, attacked me, and I did fight back,’’ Camilla told the BBC. “And I remember getting off the train and my mother looking at me and saying, ‘Why is your hair standing on end?’ and ‘Why is a button missing from your coat?’”

While the attack made her “furious,” Camilla said, she kept it quiet for many years until she heard other women recount their own stories.

She said she decided to speak up because domestic violence has been a “taboo subject” for so long that most people don’t realize how bad the situation is.

“I thought, well, if I’ve got a tiny soapbox to stand on, I’d like to stand on it,” she said. “And there’s not a lot I can do except talk to people and get people together.”

The comments came in a group interview with the surviving family members of Louise Hunt, 25, her sister Hannah, 28, and their mother Carol, 61, who were murdered by Louise’s ex-partner at their home outside London in July 2024.

The queen praised former racing commentator John Hunt and his daughter Amy for their work fighting domestic violence.

“Wherever your family is now, they’d be so proud of you both,’’ Camilla said. “And they must be, from above, smiling down on you and thinking, 'My goodness me, what a wonderful, wonderful father, husband, sister. They’d just be so proud of you both.”

While this is the first time Camilla has spoken publicly about the attack she experienced, it was previously recounted in the book “Power and the Palace,” published earlier this year by Valentine Low, a former royal correspondent for the Times of London. That account was based on what the queen told former Prime Minister Boris Johnson when he was mayor of London.

According to Low’s book, Camilla was on a train to London’s Paddington Station when the man sitting next to her reached out and attempted to touch her. She fought him off by removing her shoe and bashing him in the groin. When she got to Paddington she found a man in uniform and told him what had happened, and the man was arrested.

FILE - Britain's Queen Camilla looks on during a visit to open a new purpose-built Sexual Assault Referral Centre (SARC) in Exeter, England, Thursday Feb. 6, 2025 during the national Sexual Abuse and Sexual Violence Awareness Week 2025. (Justin Tallis/Pool Photo via AP, File)

FILE - Britain's Queen Camilla looks on during a visit to open a new purpose-built Sexual Assault Referral Centre (SARC) in Exeter, England, Thursday Feb. 6, 2025 during the national Sexual Abuse and Sexual Violence Awareness Week 2025. (Justin Tallis/Pool Photo via AP, File)

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