Jump directly to the content

A RELATIVE of an ex-KGB agent 'poisoned' in Salisbury has told how he knew he would "not be left alone" and that his life in Britain "would end badly".

Sergei Skripal is fighting for his life tonight alongside daughter Yulia after a suspected assassination attempt in the Wiltshire city.

 Yulia Skripel, 33, pictured, is fighting for life in hospital along with her former Russian spy dad Sergei Skripel, 66
25
Yulia Skripel, 33, pictured, is fighting for life in hospital along with her former Russian spy dad Sergei Skripel, 66
 This CCTV image is being probed by cops and is believed to show Sergei and his daughter Yulia before they were 'poisoned' in Salisbury, Wilts
25
This CCTV image is being probed by cops and is believed to show Sergei and his daughter Yulia before they were 'poisoned' in Salisbury, WiltsCredit: PA:Press Association

Tonight a relative told BBC Russia: "From the first day he knew it would end badly, and that he would not be left alone."

Skripal, 66, and Yulia, 33, were found slumped on a bench next to a shopping centre.

CCTV has emerged today believing to show the pair walking through a restaurant alleyway yards from where they were found in a "catatonic state".

Double agent Sergei and his daughter Yulia were seen behind Zizzi restaurant at 3.47pm on Sunday.

CCTV of a man and woman walking through alley connecting Zizzi’s and bench where former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal was found critically ill


What we know so far:

  • Ex-KGB spy Sergei Skripal, 66, and his daughter Yulia Skripal, 33, are in a critical condition in hospital after being exposed to an 'unknown substance'
  • Sergei and Yulia were found slumped on a bench in a 'catatonic state' on Sunday 
  • Anti-terror cops are investigating  CCTV believed to show the Russian dad and daughter before the suspected 'poisoning' in Salisbury, Wilts
  • Zizzi's and a nearby pub have been cordoned as police try to establish whether a crime has been committed
  • Two police officers were taken to hospital suffering itchy eyes, wheezing and rashes
  • Major incident was declared after at least 12 others suffered symptoms including vomiting
  • Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson threatens to pull officials out of the World Cup if Russia was found responsible for the suspected poisoning.
  • Russia's UK embassy deny special services were involved
  • Reports say Sergei feared for his life after the death of his wife and son in car crashes 
  • Sergei was jailed for 13 years in 2006 after being found guilty of sharing Russian state secrets to MI6
  • In 2010 he was swapped for glamour spy Anna Chapman as part of a deal between Russia and the US
  • The incident echoes of the killing of former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko
  • Home Secretary Amber Rudd will chair a meeting of the Government's emergency committee Cobra on Wednesday morning to discuss the on-going investigation into the incident in Salisbury, No 10 said.

Just 30 minutes later they were found collapsed on a bench outside The Maltings shopping centre.

The pair were rushed to hospital where they remain in a critical condition after being exposed to an unidentified substance.

Two police officers were also taken to A&E suffering itchy eyes, wheezing and rashes. One has since been discharged.

A major incident was declared as at least 12 others suffered symptoms including vomiting.

Anti-terror cops are investigating the incident and carrying out tests to find out if a crime has been committed.

Officers are analysing a CCTV image taken from a camera at Snap Fitness 24/7, according to the gym's manager.

 Moscow-based Yulia was visiting her dad Sergei, who is understood to have lost his wife, son and older brother in the last two years
25
Moscow-based Yulia was visiting her dad Sergei, who is understood to have lost his wife, son and older brother in the last two years
 Yulia was discovered alongside her dad and both remain in a critical condition in hospital
25
Yulia was discovered alongside her dad and both remain in a critical condition in hospitalCredit: East2west News
 Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal, pictured behind bars in Moscow in 2006, is fighting for his life after being 'exposed to a chemical substance'
25
Ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal, pictured behind bars in Moscow in 2006, is fighting for his life after being 'exposed to a chemical substance'
 Double agent Skripal pictured being detained by Russian secret service officers in an unknown location
25
Double agent Skripal pictured being detained by Russian secret service officers in an unknown locationCredit: Reuters

Cain Prince, 28, said: "Police had a good look at the footage and were interested in these two people. It was the only image they took away.

"They wanted a list of everyone in the gym between 3pm and 4pm as well."

Sergei and Yulia are both fighting for life after being found slumped on a bench in Maltings shopping centre.

Graham Mulcock, who saw the pair being treated by paramedics, said: "They seemed to be struggling to keep the two people conscious.

“The man was sitting staring into space in a catatonic state.”

Zizzi's and the nearby Mill pub have been cordoned off while cops investigate the incident.

Kier Pritchard, Chief Constable of Wiltshire Police, said: "It is particularly shocking that an incident such as this appears to have taken place on a quiet Sunday afternoon in the cathedral city of Salisbury."

Recent reports said Skripal was fearing for his life after his wife died in a car crash shortly after arriving in the UK while his son also killed in a road accident in Russia.

Investigators were today scrambling to identify the chemical used in the attack which has sparked fears of a Kremlin-backed hit on Skripal.

Sergei was jailed for treason in Russia and came to Britain in a 2010 spy swap.


GOT a story? RING The Sun on 0207 782 4104 or WHATSAPP on 07423720250 or EMAIL [email protected] 


25
 Police pictured outside the Maltings shopping centre which has been cordoned off following the poisoning
25
Police pictured outside the Maltings shopping centre which has been cordoned off following the poisoningCredit: Simon Jones - The Sun
 A forensics tent is pictured at the scene in Salisbury while authorities attempt to identify the substance involved in the incident
25
A forensics tent is pictured at the scene in Salisbury while authorities attempt to identify the substance involved in the incidentCredit: Simon Jones - The Sun

The incident also has echoes of the 2006 killing of former KGB officer Alexander Litvinenko who was poisoned with radioactive polonium in London.

Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson today threatened to pull officials out of the World Cup if Russia was found responsible for the suspected poisoning.

Bojo told MPs this afternoon it was "very difficult to imagine that UK representation to [the World Cup] could go ahead in the normal way".

Russia's embassy in London denied Russian special services were involved in the sudden illness of the dad and daughter.

A spokesman demanded urgent clarification from investigators "to end the demonisation of Russia".

Emergency crews in protective suits decontaminated the scene where Skripal, who came to Britain in a spy swap involving flame-haired double agent Anna Chapman, was found.

The use of CBRN (chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear) suits fuelled speculation the substance could have been radioactive or an airborne poison such as anthrax.

Officials are urging anyone in the area who feels ill to contact 111.

Who is Sergei Skripal?

  • Sergei Skripal was born on June 23 1951.
  • He was arrested in December 2004 after Russia accused him of passing on identifties of its spies onto the UK's Secret Intelligence Service MI6.
  • It claimed Skripal had been paid the $100,000 (£72,270) for the information which he had been supplying since in 1990s.
  • At the time he was serving in the Russian Ground Forces.
  • Skripal was said to have passed secrets to MI6 through a James Bond-style fake rock hidden in Moscow park.
  • Russian secret services exposed the rock in 2006, revealing how agents transmitted data to it via a hidden handheld device.
  • He was found guilty of 'high treason in the form of espinoage' and sentenced to 13 years in prison.
  • However he was released by Moscow in 2010 following a 'spy swap' deal made between the US and Russia.
  • Among the trade-off was glamour spy Anna Chapman.
  • He was nicknamed 'the spy with the Louis Vuitton bag' after pictures showed him carrying a bag at an airport en route to meeting his handlers.
  • Skripal was then flown to the UK and granted refuge. After settling in Salisbury in a £350,000 semi-detatched house his wife Liudmila who died in 2012.

Last night Litvinenko's widow Marina told : "It looks similar to what happened to my husband but we need more information. We need to know the substance. Was it radioactive?"

Skripal and his female companion, thought to be in her 30s, were found on Sunday afternoon slumped on a bench in the shopping centre while one of them had vomited nearby.

Skripal was taken to the city’s hospital by ambulance while his daughter was flown by air ambulance and their arrival sparked the shutdown of the hospital’s A&E department.

Police declared a major incident and quarantined key locations including the A&E department, where up to 12 people began vomiting.

 

 Police have closed the Mill pub in The Maltings area of Salisbury today
25
Police have closed the Mill pub in The Maltings area of Salisbury todayCredit: PA:Press Association
 Police arrived outside a house in Salisbury believed to belong to the ex-Russian spy Sunday evening
25
Police arrived outside a house in Salisbury believed to belong to the ex-Russian spy Sunday eveningCredit: Solent News
 A Zizzi restaurant in Salisbury had been closed 'as a precaution' to the incident
25
A Zizzi restaurant in Salisbury had been closed 'as a precaution' to the incidentCredit: PA:Press Association/PA Images
 Incident Response crews were called to deal with the substance found near the pair in Salisbury
25
Incident Response crews were called to deal with the substance found near the pair in SalisburyCredit: Solent News
 Sergei Skripal was pardoned by then-President Dmitry Medvedev and swapped for Anna Chapman, pictured, as part of a 'spy swap' between Russia and the US
25
Sergei Skripal was pardoned by then-President Dmitry Medvedev and swapped for Anna Chapman, pictured, as part of a 'spy swap' between Russia and the USCredit: Maxim
 The spy-turned-model posing for the Russian edition of Maxim in 2010
25
The spy-turned-model posing for the Russian edition of Maxim in 2010Credit: Pacific Coast News

RUSSIA'S THIRST FOR REVENGE

By Nick Parker

PUTIN’S henchmen were desperate to take revenge on Sergei Skripal after he gave MI6 the identities of hundreds of Russian agents.

He was exposed as a double agent in 2006 and a Kremlin official admitted after his trial: “His activities caused a significant blow to Russia.”

Another source said: “This man is a big hero for MI6.”

The loathing for Skripal was spelled out by Russian secret services historian Nikolai Luzan, who claimed many of the agents identified by him in the West were “secretly arrested” or “vanished”.

He referred to Skripal in a 2014 interview as “this b*****d” — adding “just imagine what muck this man did to other people”.

Skripal was “turned” by MI6 in the mid-1990s.

He was called “the Louis Vuitton spy” because of his love of designer gear.

Witness Freya Church, who was in the centre, said: “It looked like they’d been taking something quite strong.

“On the bench there was a couple, an older guy and a younger girl. She was sort of leant in on him. It looked like she’d passed out, maybe.

‘’He was doing some strange hand movements, looking up to the sky.”

Dust, pollen and samples from the two latest victims are being examined at the MoD’s Porton Down labs, close to Salisbury.

Justice Secretary David Gauke refused to comment on the attack this morning.

But challenged by the Sun he said he “did not want to be drawn into that at this stage”.

He added: “Jumping to conclusions would not be appropriate.”

Skripal was regarded as a traitor in Russia where he was jailed for 13 years in 2006.

 Former Russian spy Skripal, 66, were found at Salisbury's Maltings shopping centre alongside a female companion
25
Former Russian spy Skripal, 66, were found at Salisbury's Maltings shopping centre alongside a female companion

The 66-year-old was accused of working for MI6 over several years, in particular disclosing the names of several dozen Russian agents working in Europe.

He was sentenced to 13 years in a high-security prison in August 2006, before being freed in a 2010 deal which saw 10 Russian sleeper agents expelled from the US.

Skripal retired from military intelligence, often known by its Russian-language acronym GRU, in 1999.

He went on to work at the Foreign Ministry until 2003 before becoming involved in business.

Eyewitness describes seeing former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and a woman unconscious after they were exposed to an unknown substance
 Suspicions have grown whether the incident was backed by the Kremlin as the case echoes the killing of Alexander Litvinenko in 2006
25
Suspicions have grown whether the incident was backed by the Kremlin as the case echoes the killing of Alexander Litvinenko in 2006Credit: Getty Images - Getty

PUTIN A PLOTTER

A PUBLIC inquiry into the London killing of ex-spy Alexander Litvinenko said he was poisoned by a Russian agent — probably with President Putin’s approval.

The radioactive polonium-210 that killed Litvinenko is believed to have been given to him in a cup of tea by ex-KGB man Andrei Lugovoi after the pair met at a hotel.

Litvinenko had been an officer with the Federal Security Service, (FSB) successors to the KGB.

He fled to Britain in 2000 where he worked for MI6 after being granted asylum.

Litvinenko, 43, was a fierce critic of the Putin regime, having initially fallen out with him over corruption at the FSB.

In 2013 exiled Russian billionaire Boris Berezovsky was found hanged at his mansion in Sunninghill, Berks.

A coroner recorded an open verdict but his daughter claims he was killed for criticising Putin.

He was arrested in 2004 in Moscow and admitted he was recruited by British intelligence in 1995 and had provided information about GRU agents in Europe, for which he was paid more than £72,000 ($100,000).

Four years later, he was freed and came to Britain in the high-profile spy swap with Chapman heading back to Russia as part of the deal.

The glamorous redhead, once ordered to seduce US whistleblower Edward Snowden, went on to become a model and media personality.

Sources said hardline president Vladimir Putin would never have forgiven Skripal after his conviction for treason.

Former KGB chief Putin once said: “Traitors always end in a bad way. Usually from a drinking habit, or from drugs, right in the street.”

Moment Russian double agent Sergei Skripal is arrested in 2004
 Skripal was arrested in December 2004 by Russian authorities after he was accused of sharing state secrets with the UK's Secret Intelligence Service MI6
25
Skripal was arrested in December 2004 by Russian authorities after he was accused of sharing state secrets with the UK's Secret Intelligence Service MI6Credit: Zvezda/east2west news
 Footage showed him being bundled into the back of a dark van by the men
25
Footage showed him being bundled into the back of a dark van by the menCredit: Zvezda/east2west news

The Kremlin said today it was ready to cooperate if Britain asks it for help investigating the incident.

"Nobody has approached us with such a request," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told a conference call with reporters.

He added: “Moscow is always open for cooperation."

When asked to respond to British media speculation that Russia had poisoned Skripal, Peskov said: “It didn't take them long."

Calling the incident "a tragic situation," he said the Kremlin did not have information about what had happened.

"We don't have information about what the reason (for the incident) could be, what this person was doing, and what it could be linked to," said Peskov.

He said he did not know whether Skripal was still formally a Russian national.

 Sergei Kripal's arrival at the city's hospital sparked a shutdown of the A&E department as locations had to be quarantined
25
Sergei Kripal's arrival at the city's hospital sparked a shutdown of the A&E department as locations had to be quarantined

Litvinenko was killed by two FSB spies who slipped radioactive polonium 210 into his tea pot at a Mayfair hotel after he fled to Britain.

Intelligence chiefs have declared that a vengeful Putin “probably approved” his murder.

Skripal appears to have tried to keep a low profile for the past eight years after starting a new life in Wiltshire.

But inquiries showed his name and address was, inexplicably, on the voters’ electoral roll and open to public scrutiny.

It was unclear whether he was still viewed as an asset by British intelligence or whether he had been given a safe house or a secret identity.

Neighbour Mark Medhurst, 43, told the Daily Mail that Skripal drove a BMW and kept the lights off at his home.

James Puttock, 47, told the Guardian his neighbour was "very quiet".

 Sergei was given refuge in Britain after being swapped for glamour spy and model Anna Chapman
25
Sergei was given refuge in Britain after being swapped for glamour spy and model Anna ChapmanCredit: AP:Associated Press
 Chapman, pictured on a beach in Thailand, has become a media personality in Russia
25
Chapman, pictured on a beach in Thailand, has become a media personality in RussiaCredit: east2west news
 The red-haired beauty is said to have been tasked with seducing American whistleblower Edward Snowden
25
The red-haired beauty is said to have been tasked with seducing American whistleblower Edward SnowdenCredit: Instagram

He said: "He was always walking past, but he did sometimes drive his BMW 3 Series. He never really looked smart, he looked very casual."

Meanwhile, his compatriot Sutyagin, who always protested his innocence, told the Associated Press in an interview in August 2010 he wanted to return to Russia, saying: "It's my country. I am not on the run."

He went on to become a research fellow at the Royal United Services Institute specialising in US-Russian relations.

Of his conversations with Skripal on the 2010 flight out of Russia, he told the Guardian: "He talked about his family. It seemed to me it was his family which was his major joy."

The Met’s SO15 counter-terrorism branch have been notified about the suspected poisoning in Salisbury, although Wiltshire Police are taking the lead role in the investigation.

 Insiders claim Vladmir Putin had never forgiven Sergei Skripal after he was convicted for treason
25
Insiders claim Vladmir Putin had never forgiven Sergei Skripal after he was convicted for treasonCredit: Reuters
 Up to 12 people began vomiting at the A&E department where Sergei Kripal and his female companion are being treated
25
Up to 12 people began vomiting at the A&E department where Sergei Kripal and his female companion are being treatedCredit: Solent News

MI5 and MI6 are also liaising closely with police.

Wiltshire’s Temporary Assistant Chief Constable Craig told a press conference last night: “This has not been declared as a counter-terrorism incident and we would urge people not to speculate.

“However, I must emphasise that we retain an open mind and we will continue to review this position.

“We have access to a wide range of specialist resources and services that are helping us to understand what we are or aren’t dealing with at this time.”

The Russian embassy said: “Neither relatives nor legal representatives of the said person, nor the British authorities have addressed the embassy in this regard.”

Wiltshire Police said: “Public Health England are aware of this and have reiterated that, based on the evidence to date, there is no known risk to the public's health.

“However, as a precaution they have advised that if you feel ill contact NHS on 111.

“If you feel your own or another's health is significantly deteriorating, ring 999.”

THE KILLER ELEMENT

DEADLY radioactive polonium has been used before by Russians to target enemies.

The element is lethal to humans if ingested. It causes acute liver and kidney damage and other symptoms similar to the final stages of cancer.

Polonium was discovered in 1898 by scientist Marie Curie and her husband Pierre, who named it after Marie’s homeland Poland.

It is hugely expensive to manufacture and is so toxic that its use is restricted.



GOT a story? Ring The Sun on 0207 782 4104 or WHATSAPP on 07423720250 or email [email protected]


 

Topics