The Prague Post - Putin found 'morally responsible' for nerve agent death in UK

EUR -
AED 4.254028
AFN 72.975903
ALL 95.154687
AMD 426.109595
ANG 2.073974
AOA 1063.36271
ARS 1614.391152
AUD 1.625505
AWG 2.087631
AZN 1.970651
BAM 1.951197
BBD 2.332328
BDT 142.315474
BGN 1.934347
BHD 0.436777
BIF 3448.53435
BMD 1.158347
BND 1.482116
BOB 8.002156
BRL 5.827412
BSD 1.157983
BTN 111.344236
BWP 15.694837
BYN 3.170048
BYR 22703.605017
BZD 2.329015
CAD 1.597673
CDF 2610.333649
CHF 0.91448
CLF 0.026461
CLP 1041.446913
CNY 7.878498
CNH 7.883253
COP 4309.132649
CRC 523.771087
CUC 1.158347
CUP 30.696201
CVE 110.004998
CZK 24.293897
DJF 206.211719
DKK 7.472758
DOP 68.20996
DZD 153.490971
EGP 61.306175
ERN 17.375208
ETB 186.695648
FJD 2.55433
FKP 0.861879
GBP 0.864642
GEL 3.098589
GGP 0.861879
GHS 13.375502
GIP 0.861879
GMD 83.979052
GNF 10152.005283
GTQ 8.83013
GYD 242.266347
HKD 9.076073
HNL 30.800733
HRK 7.527515
HTG 151.584341
HUF 359.533015
IDR 20472.62832
ILS 3.373861
IMP 0.861879
INR 111.642951
IQD 1517.0406
IRR 1530118.726903
ISK 143.391593
JEP 0.861879
JMD 182.339819
JOD 0.821212
JPY 184.459786
KES 150.063865
KGS 101.297817
KHR 4649.989471
KMF 492.297217
KPW 1042.500755
KRW 1749.625552
KWD 0.358566
KYD 0.965015
KZT 545.622174
LAK 25379.234147
LBP 103699.796148
LKR 400.086106
LRD 211.918207
LSL 19.188647
LTL 3.420298
LVL 0.700672
LYD 7.363596
MAD 10.69991
MDL 20.08544
MGA 4863.546777
MKD 61.617722
MMK 2432.515968
MNT 4145.415952
MOP 9.344972
MRU 45.961368
MUR 54.824871
MVR 17.850284
MWK 2007.945464
MXN 20.123624
MYR 4.590064
MZN 74.009373
NAD 19.188895
NGN 1588.232942
NIO 42.620185
NOK 10.723395
NPR 178.146175
NZD 1.979155
OMR 0.445367
PAB 1.157973
PEN 3.951745
PGK 5.050064
PHP 71.398212
PKR 322.475606
PLN 4.248719
PYG 7144.114567
QAR 4.22232
RON 5.240943
RSD 117.405495
RUB 82.484615
RWF 1698.777531
SAR 4.3486
SBD 9.289286
SCR 15.594617
SDG 695.588211
SEK 10.877926
SGD 1.483246
SHP 0.864823
SLE 28.524315
SLL 24289.963939
SOS 661.832872
SRD 43.040698
STD 23975.448238
STN 24.442651
SVC 10.132052
SYP 128.061073
SZL 19.182744
THB 37.901366
TJS 10.757827
TMT 4.065799
TND 3.391598
TOP 2.789022
TRY 52.83755
TTD 7.854436
TWD 36.550838
TZS 3017.492121
UAH 51.21116
UGX 4380.702742
USD 1.158347
UYU 46.689647
UZS 13907.129879
VES 602.645129
VND 30528.240318
VUV 137.753165
WST 3.136592
XAF 654.407454
XAG 0.01545
XAU 0.000257
XCD 3.130491
XCG 2.087012
XDR 0.813337
XOF 654.410272
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.410557
ZAR 19.185878
ZMK 10426.515605
ZMW 21.799664
ZWL 372.987324
  • CMSC

    -0.1300

    22.65

    -0.57%

  • BCC

    -0.0900

    67.19

    -0.13%

  • NGG

    1.5200

    86.24

    +1.76%

  • BCE

    0.3050

    24.475

    +1.25%

  • RIO

    1.8750

    105.185

    +1.78%

  • AZN

    2.3700

    189.83

    +1.25%

  • RBGPF

    -0.1800

    63

    -0.29%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    12.74

    +0.55%

  • CMSD

    -0.1450

    22.745

    -0.64%

  • VOD

    -0.1100

    15.13

    -0.73%

  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    16.32

    +0.43%

  • RELX

    -0.2500

    33.35

    -0.75%

  • BP

    -0.1600

    44.97

    -0.36%

  • GSK

    0.8850

    51.665

    +1.71%

  • BTI

    0.6700

    65.97

    +1.02%

Putin found 'morally responsible' for nerve agent death in UK
Putin found 'morally responsible' for nerve agent death in UK / Photo: HO - Metropolitan Police Service/AFP

Putin found 'morally responsible' for nerve agent death in UK

The UK Thursday sanctioned Russia's intelligence service and summoned Moscow's ambassador after an inquiry found President Vladimir Putin bore "moral responsibility" for the death of a British woman in a 2018 nerve agent attack.

Text size:

Mother-of-three Dawn Sturgess, 44, died after spraying herself with what she thought was perfume from a discarded bottle of chic Nina Ricci fragrance -- but turned out to be the deadly chemical Novichok.

The public inquiry found the bottle had been dumped in the city of Salisbury in southwest England after two suspects thought to be Russian spies brought it there in a failed attempt to assassinate former double agent Sergei Skripal in March 2018.

The inquiry's report found the assassination attempt "must have been authorised at the highest level, by President Putin", and concluded the Russian leader bears "moral responsibility" for Sturgess's death four months later.

"It is clear that this attack showed considerable determination and was expected to stand as a public demonstration of Russian power," the report concluded.

Following its publication, London said it had summoned the Russian ambassador to answer for Moscow's "ongoing campaign of hostile activity".

The UK also sanctioned the Russian intelligence agency blamed for the attack, the GRU, "in its entirety", the foreign ministry said, as well as 11 "actors behind Russian state-sponsored hostile activity".

Russia has repeatedly denied involvement in the attack, but UK government officials have long suspected Putin of authorising it.

The attack against Skripal led to what was then the largest-ever expulsion of diplomats between Western powers and Russia, and a limited round of sanctions by the West.

Those sanctions have now been outstripped by the UK's response to Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

The attempt on Skripal's life is the latest in a line of espionage thriller-worthy episodes to damage UK-Russian relations.

A previous British inquiry found in 2016 that Putin "probably approved" the 2006 killing in London of ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko, a prominent Kremlin critic, with radioactive polonium.

- 'Astonishingly reckless' -

Skripal and his daughter Yulia were found slumped unconscious on a park bench in the city of Salisbury in March 2018 after the door handle to Skripal's house was daubed with Novichok.

They survived after intensive hospital treatment and now live under protection.

The bottle containing "Novichok made in Russia" was brought to Salisbury by two suspects, Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov -- thought to be GRU agents, the report states.

It was dumped by them in the city after they likely used it to attack the Skripals.

"The conduct of Petrov and Boshirov, their GRU superiors, and those who authorised the mission up to and including, as I have found, President Putin, was astonishingly reckless," the inquiry chair, former senior judge Anthony Hughes, said after the report was published.

"They, and only they, bear moral responsibility for Dawn's death," said Hughes, adding Sturgess was "the entirely innocent victim of the cruel and cynical acts of others".

The inquiry found that while there were some "failings" in the handling of Skripal's security, it was not "unreasonable" for British intelligence to believe there was no high risk of assassination.

- Caught in crossfire -

The public inquiry into Sturgess's death, which began last year, was told by lawyer Andrew O'Connor that she was unwittingly caught up in an "illegal and outrageous international assassination attempt".

The perfume bottle contained enough Novichok to poison "thousands" of people, O'Connor had told the inquiry.

"Deploying a highly toxic nerve agent in a busy city was an astonishingly reckless act," the report stated.

"The risk that others beyond the intended target, Sergei Skripal, might be killed or injured was entirely foreseeable."

In a witness statement submitted to the inquiry, Skripal said he believed Putin had ordered the attack "based on my years of experience and my analysis of the continuous degradation of Russia".

But he added: "I do not have concrete evidence to support this."

While Skripal did not give evidence in person over safety concerns, the inquiry also held closed sessions on intelligence matters.

Relations between London and Moscow remain in deep freeze over Russia's war in Ukraine, and diplomatic tensions and tit-for-tat expulsions have continued over claims of espionage activity.

R.Rous--TPP