What is Novichok? Nerve agent used to poison Alexei Navalny
NOVICHOK has been identified by German officials as the substance used in a possible attack on Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, who fell violently ill on August 20.
The deadly nerve agent was previously used on former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter in Salisbury in 2018, as well as in the unintentional killing of Dawn Sturgess.
What is the nerve agent Novichok?
Novichok - the Russian for newcomer or newbie - applies to a group of advanced nerve agents developed by the Soviet Union.
They were known as fourth-generation chemical weapons and are reported to be five times more potent than the notorious VX gas.
According to scientists who worked on the program, the aim was to create extremely potent nerve agents that were undetectable to normal instruments.
The poison was designed to be made of two relatively harmless materials which are mixed together when needed, making it easier and safer to store and transport.
What does Novichok do to the human body?
Novichok agents, dispersed as an ultra-fine powder or gel rather than vapour, belong to the class of inhibitors called "organophosphate acetylcholinesterase".
They prevent the normal breakdown of a neurotransmitter called acetylcholine which, when it builds up, causes muscles to contract involuntarily.
Because the victim's heart and diaphragm aren't functioning properly, this leads to respiratory and cardiac arrest.
Those affected usually die from total heart failure or suffocation as copious fluid secretions fill their lungs.
But even if they don't die, the substance can also cause severe nerve damage, leaving victims permanently disabled, Russian scientists have said.
Is there an antidote?
If a person is exposed to Novichok agents, they should be immediately connected to life support and decontaminated — that is, their clothes should be removed and their skin washed with soap and water.
A number of antidotes, including atropine, pralidoxime and diazepam, can be used to treat those exposed to nerve agents.
However, these treatments are not guaranteed to aid recovery, and even if appropriate nerve agent antidotes are administered, there is still a high chance of permanent damage to the human body.
Was Putin critic Alexei Navalny poisoned by Novichok?
German officials have found traces of the nerve agent Novichok in samples taken from Alexei Navalny, who was taken ill amid claims from his press secretary that the lawyer's tea was spiked with poison.
Navalny is a Russian activist, lawyer and leader of the of the Russian opposition Progress Party.
The lawyer was heard screaming in agony as he fell seriously ill on a flight to Moscow on August 20 - and was later flown to Germany for medical treatment.
Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman Steffen Seibert confirmed on September 2 that the Soviet-era nerve agent had been found following tests in a German military laboratory.
What happened in Amesbury?
Counter-terror police stepped in to investigate after Charlie Rowley, 45, and Dawn Sturgess, 44, were found unconscious at a property in Amesbury, eight miles from Salisbury, on June 3, 2018.
Emergency tests were carried out at the government's Porton Down chemical weapons laboratory to identify what the substance was.
On the evening of July 4 2018, the Metropolitan Police confirmed the couple had been exposed to Novichok.
Dawn died in hospital on July 8 2018. Charlie regained consciousness on July 10 and has since been released from hospital.
It is believed Dawn, 44 was exposed to at least ten times the amount of nerve agent used on ex-KGB colonel Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia.
Cops are probing a theory the poison was in a perfume bottle discarded by the Russian assassins. It is believed Charlie found the bottle and Dawn sprayed the contents on her wrists.
In August 2018, Charlie was reportedly rushed to intensive care after going blind - but his illness is not believed to be an effect of the poison.
Who are the Salisbury poisoning suspects?
In July 2018, Scotland Yard said they believed a two-man hit squad was behind the Salisbury attack.
The pair are thought to have left the UK the morning after and arrived back in Russia under the protection of Vladimir Putin.
In September 2018, police revealed names and photos of two Russian men wanted over the attempted hit on the Skripals.
Cops issued a European Arrest Warrant for Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov, while the CPS said there was enough evidence to charge them with conspiracy to murder.
The suspects were caught on CCTV in Salisbury at 11.58am on the Sunday March 4 “moments before the attack”, police said.
It is understood Petrov and Boshirov stayed in the City Stay Hotel in Bow, East London, during their time in the UK.
Cops searching their room on May 4 - almost two months after the attack in Salisbury - are said to have discovered minute traces of Novichok.
Police said the nerve agent was brought into Britain in a Ninna Ricci ‘Premier Jour’ perfume bottle with a specially made poison applicator.
Where is the case now?
The conclusion of the case is uncertain.
Scotland Yard officers are still investigating the attack, after charging Chepiga and Mishkin with conspiracy to murder and novichok possession in September.
Sajid Javid has said that as Russia will not extradite the suspects, and they can only be detained if they enter a nation that complies with European Arrest Warrants and Interpol red notices, catching them is unlikely.
“If they ever step out of the Russian Federation, Britain and its allies will get them and we will bring them to prosecution,” the former Chancellor of the Exchequer vowed.
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