Britain puts Novichok victim Skripal’s house on sale

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British authorities plan to sell the home of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia three years after their near-fatal poisoning with a Soviet-developed nerve agent.

Officers found a high concentration of Novichok smeared on the door handle of the Skripals’ home in Salisbury after they were discovered collapsed on a public bench in 2018. Britain accused Russian military intelligence of poisoning the Skripals, a claim that Moscow denies.

According to the BBC, the local council in southwest England’s Wiltshire county announced plans to buy the Skripals’ house and put it back on the market.  

“During the coming months, we will rebuild and refurbish the property to bring it back into use as a home,” Wiltshire Council leader Philip Whitehead was quoted as saying.

Addressing residents’ concerns that it could be used as an “Airbnb or a museum,” Whitehead vowed that “the property will not be used for anything other than a home.”

“It will be good to see this house used as a home again,” BBC quoted him as saying.

The Christie Miller Road two-bedroom was one of at least 12 sites that had to be decontaminated and ruled safe following the March 4, 2018, incident.

The Amesbury apartment of Dawn Sturgess, a local resident who is believed to have been killed by discarded Novichok four months after the Skripals’ poisoning attempt, was demolished in 2020.

Sergei Skripal is a former GRU officer who in 2004 was convicted of treason in Moscow for his work as a double agent for British intelligence. Sentenced to 13 years in a Russian penal colony, he was freed during a spy swap between the United States and Russia. He relocated to Salisbury in 2010 and lived openly under his real identity.

The Skripals were reported to have fled under new identities after recovering from the poisoning.

Western scientists determined last year that a form of Novichok was also used to poison Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny, who fell into a coma on a flight last summer. Russian authorities jailed him for two and a half years after he returned from recovery in Germany this year.

Skripals leave Britain, relocates in New Zealand

Former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia have relocated to New Zealand two years after suffering a near-fatal poisoning attempt that Britain pins on Russia, The Sunday Times reported.

Sergei, 68, and Yulia, 35, were exposed to military-grade nerve agent Novichok in the British city of Salisbury in March 2018. British officials linked Russia’s GRU military intelligence agency to the assassination attempt, plunging relations between Russia and the West to their lowest point in years.

The Skripals were given new identities and support to start their new life overseas and will likely never appear publicly under their real names again, The Times reported, citing senior British officials.

No further details about the Skripals’ new life were given.

“We do not comment on intelligence matters,” The Times quoted a Home Office source as saying.

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