From
the ridiculous to the preposterous – British media coverage of
"Amesbury attack"
How
is one to keep a straight face with this "news" coverage.
Do the presenters on BBC and Channel 4 really believe the scripts
that are put before them?
Here
is a crosssection of coverage in the press.
Home
secretary says Russia must explain what has gone on after latest
novichok poisonings
Britain
will consult its allies about a possible response to Russia over the
latest poisonings in Wiltshire as it emerged that the couple taken
critically ill had handled an item contaminated with the nerve agent
novichok.
The
home secretary, Sajid Javid, accused Moscow of using the UK as a
“dumping ground” for poison and urged Russia to explain “exactly
what has gone on”.
In
Salisbury, public health and council chiefs warned people not to pick
up unidentified objects but dismissed the idea of making a general
sweep of the city for novichok, although they said they could not
rule out the possibility that more of the nerve agent was present.
The
Guardian understands that the novichok that harmed them may have been
in a sealed container left following the attack on the former Russian
spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, in March.
Sources
close to the investigation dropped a hint that they may now know the
identity of the would-be killers who targeted the Skripals.
The
Metropolitan police confirmed on Thursday evening that the couple
taken ill, Dawn Sturgess, 44, from Salisbury, and Charlie Rowley, 45,
of Amesbury, collapsed after picking up a contaminated item.
Queen
Elizabeth Gardens in Salisbury is cordoned off.
In
a statement, the force said: “Following further tests of samples
from the patients, we now know that they were exposed to the nerve
agent after handling a contaminated item.”
The
incident in Amesbury is being viewed by the authorities as an
after-effect of the March attack rather than a major new development.
This would suggest the police do not regard the agent as being from a
fresh batch, although the Met said it could not confirm this. The
statement said: “We are not in a position to say whether the nerve
agent was from the same batch that the Skripals were exposed to.”
Updating
MPs after he chaired a meeting of the government’s Cobra security
meeting on Thursday morning, the home secretary confirmed Sturgess
and Rowley appeared to have been exposed to novichok at a separate
location to the Skripals.
“Our
strong working assumption is that they came into contact with the
nerve agent in a different location to the sites that were part of
the initial clean-up operation,” Javid said.
The
Kremlin has denied any involvement in the latest incident and the
Russian embassy in London renewed its offer to take part in a joint
investigation with the UK.
Javid
told the Commons: “As we did before, we will be consulting with our
international partners and allies following these latest
developments. The eyes of the world are currently on Russia, not
least because of the World Cup. It is now time that the Russian state
comes forward and explains exactly what has gone on.
“Let
me be clear: we do not have a quarrel with the Russian people.
Rather, it is the actions of the Russian government.
“We
will stand up to the actions that threaten our security and the
security of our partners. It is unacceptable for our people to be
either deliberate or accidental targets, or for our streets, our
parks, our towns to be dumping grounds for poison.”
On
Thursday, a hostel in Salisbury where Sturgess had a room was
evacuated and a bin outside put under police guard. All 20 residents
of John Baker House were told to pack a bag and leave the building.
Other areas cordoned off include Rowley’s home in Muggleton Road in
Amesbury where the pair fell ill.
Police
warned that the people of Salisbury would soon see experts in hazmat
suits back on the streets of Salisbury.
Sturgess
and Rowley remain critically ill and doctors at Salisbury district
hospital are trying to stabilise them. More than 100 people have
phoned a helpline for people with concerns about the incident but
nobody else had been taken ill.
At
a press conference in Amesbury, the Wiltshire police chief constable,
Kier Pritchard, said it was unbelievable that he was having to talk
about another novichok nerve agent incident.
He
said: “We, like our communities and the wider public, are shocked
that a second major incident of a similar nature has unfolded in
Wiltshire.”
Alistair
Cunningham, the chair of the Salisbury Recovery Co-ordinating Group,
denied there had been a failure in the clean-up following the attack
on the Skripals and was confident that the areas where
decontamination work had taken place were clean.
He
emphasised that Sturgess and Rowley were believed to have fallen ill
after visiting different areas to the Skripals. He said there would
be no “blanket” search for novichok but the investigation would
establish which new areas needed to be decontaminated. He said it was
not possible to prove that there was no novichok left in Salisbury.
Cunningham
said scientists had said novichok degraded in the natural environment
over time, adding to the notion that the substance Sturgess and
Rowley came into contact with was in a container.
Debbie
Stark, the region’s deputy director for Public Health England,
urged people not to pick up any unidentified objects. She said:
“Based on current evidence, the risk to the general public as a
result of this incident, remains low.
“I
understand that people in Amesbury and Salisbury, and those who have
recently visited the area, will be concerned about this incident. I
would however like to reassure you, that it is safe to continue with
your daily business and lives in the area.”
Investigators
have ruled out the possibility that Sturgess and Rowley had any links
to Russia or were targeted for assassination. However, they may now
know the identity of the individuals who smeared the door knob at the
Skripals’ home in Salisbury.
In
May, it emerged that police and intelligence agencies had failed to
identify those responsible, hampered in part by a lack of CCTV
footage in Salisbury, but the police have now changed tack, neither
confirming nor denying whether they know the perpetrators’
identities.
- Dawn Sturgess, 44, and Charlie Rowley, 45, fighting for their lives after exposure to Novichok nerve agent
- Couple, understood to be drug users, are in critical condition in hospital after being exposed on weekend
- Family fear Dawn is on the 'brink of death' and fear 'she's going to die' after they both fell ill on Saturday
- Experts fear that they may have handled or used a syringe or needle that assassins used to carry the poison
- One friend said: 'It was definitely an accident. I think they found a package and it looked like drugs'
- Former neighbour claims Dawn would pick up discarded cigarette butts and could have 'smoked the poison'
- Counter-terrorism police sent samples to MoD's Porton Down laboratory and confirmed it was Novichok
- Couple found seven miles from where Sergei Skripal and daughter Yulai poisoned with Novichok in March
- Police have locked down several sites new victims visited including a Salisbury park never decontaminated
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