London — A British woman who died after being exposed to the Soviet-era nerve agent Novichok was unwittingly caught up in an “illegal and outrageous international assassination attempt,” a public inquiry was told on Monday.
Dawn Sturgess, a 44-year-old mother of three children, died in July 2018 after spraying herself with what she thought was perfume from a discarded bottle containing the deadly chemical weapon.
Her death followed a failed poison attack against former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal in Salisbury, southwest England. The U.K. government has said it was “highly likely” Russia was behind the plot.
Skripal and his daughter Yulia were found unconscious on a bench in Salisbury in March 2018. They survived after intensive hospital treatment and now live under protection.
At the start of public hearings into Sturgess’s death in Salisbury, inquiry lawyer Andrew O’Connor said the perfume bottle contained enough Novichok to poison “thousands” of people.
“It’s no exaggeration to say the circumstances of Dawn Sturgess’s death were extraordinary,” he told the hearing.
“When Ms Sturgess was poisoned by Novichok four months after the Skripal poisoning, the real possibility emerged that she had been caught — an innocent victim — in the crossfire of an illegal and outrageous international assassination attempt,” he added.
U.K. authorities believe that agents targeting the Skripals threw the perfume bottle away, making the two cases “inextricably interwoven”.
The attempt to kill Skripal, on whom Russian President Vladimir Putin had sworn vengeance, plunged London-Moscow relations to a new low.
Britain blames the Novichok attack on two Russian security service officers who allegedly entered the country using false passports. A third has been named as the operation’s mastermind.
All three are thought to be members of the GRU Russian intelligence agency. Russia, whose constitution does not allow extradition, has denied involvement and dismissed the inquiry as a “circus.”
Six years on, relations between the countries — already hit by claims that Russia was behind the 2006 radiation poisoning of former agent Alexander Litvinenko — remain in deep freeze.
The Sturgess inquiry will include closed sessions to investigate “private material” and intelligence related to the case. The Skripals will not give live evidence due to safety concerns.
Sturgess’s family was “particularly concerned” about whether the U.K. government had taken appropriate steps to protect the Skripals and the wider public from collateral damage, according to O’Connor.
International arrest warrants have been issued for the suspects, but Theresa May, who was prime minister at the time of the attack, warned justice was unlikely.
She told the BBC last week that she hoped the inquiry would help “the family and friends of Dawn Sturgess feel it has got to the truth.”
But “closure to all the people affected would only finally come with justice, and that justice is highly unlikely to happen,” May added.
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