PM’s statement on the Salisbury investigation
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With permission, Mr Speaker, I would like to update the House on
the investigation into the attempted murder of Sergey and Yulia
Skripal - and the subsequent poisoning of Dawn Sturgess and Charlie
Rowley earlier this year. This was a sickening and
despicable act in which a devastatingly toxic nerve agent - known
as Novichok - was used to attack our country. It left four people
fighting for their lives and one innocent woman dead. And I know
the thoughts of the whole...Request free
trial
With permission, Mr Speaker, I would like to update the House on
the investigation into the attempted murder of Sergey and Yulia
Skripal - and the subsequent poisoning of Dawn Sturgess and
Charlie Rowley earlier this year.
This was a sickening and despicable act in which a devastatingly
toxic nerve agent - known as Novichok - was used to attack our
country. It left four people fighting for their lives and one
innocent woman dead. And I know the thoughts of the whole House
will be with the family of Dawn Sturgess in particular, following
their tragic loss.
In March I set out for the House why the government concluded
that the Russian State was culpable for the attempted murder of
Mr Skripal and his daughter.
I also said that - while we all share a sense of impatience to
bring those responsible to justice – as a nation that believes in
the rule of law we would give the police the space and time to
carry out their investigation properly.
Since then around 250 detectives have trawled through more than
11,000 hours of CCTV and taken more than 1,400 statements.
Working around the clock they have carried out painstaking and
methodical work to ascertain exactly which individuals were
responsible and the methods they used to carry out this
attack.
Mr Speaker, this forensic investigation has now produced
sufficient evidence for the independent Director of Public
Prosecutions to bring charges against two Russian nationals
for:
This morning, the police have set out how the two Russian nationals travelled under the names of Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov – names the police believe to be aliases.
They arrived at Gatwick Airport at 3pm on Friday
2nd March, having flown from Moscow on flight
SU2588.
They travelled by train to London Victoria, then on to Waterloo
before going to the City Stay Hotel in Bow Road East London.
They stayed there on both Friday and Saturday evenings – and
traces of Novichok were found in their hotel room.
On Saturday 3rd March they visited Salisbury,
arriving at approximately 2.25pm and leaving less than two hours
later, at 4.10pm. The police are confident this was for
reconnaissance of the Salisbury area.
On Sunday 4th March they made the same journey,
travelling by underground from Bow to Waterloo station at
approximately 8.05am, before continuing by train to
Salisbury.
The police have today released CCTV footage of the two men which
clearly places them in the immediate vicinity of the Skripals’
house at 11.58am, which the police say was moments before the
attack.
They left Salisbury and returned to Waterloo arriving at
approximately 4.45pm and boarded the underground at approximately
6.30pm to Heathrow - from where they returned to Moscow on flight
SU2585, departing at 10.30pm.
Mr Speaker, this hard evidence has enabled the independent Crown
Prosecution Service to conclude they have a sufficient basis on
which to bring charges against these two men for the attack in
Salisbury.
The same two men are now also the prime suspects in the case of
Dawn Sturgess and Charlie Rowley too.
There is no other line of inquiry beyond this.
And the police have today formally linked the attack on the
Skripals and the events in Amesbury – such that it now forms one
investigation.
There are good reasons for doing so.
Our own analysis, together with yesterday’s report from the
Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, has
confirmed that the exact same chemical nerve agent was used in
both cases.
There is no evidence to suggest that Dawn and Charlie may have
been deliberately targeted, but rather were victims of the
reckless disposal of this agent.
The police have today released further details of the small glass
counterfeit perfume bottle and box discovered in Charlie Rowley’s
house which was found to contain this nerve agent.
And the manner in which the bottle was modified leaves no doubt
it was a cover for smuggling the weapon into the country, and for
the delivery method for the attack against the Skripals’ front
door.
Mr Speaker, the police investigation into the poisoning of Dawn
and Charlie is ongoing and the police are today appealing for
further information. But were these two suspects within our
jurisdiction there would be a clear basis in law for their arrest
for murder.
Mr Speaker, we repeatedly asked Russia to account for what
happened in Salisbury in March, and they have replied with
obfuscation and lies.
This has included trying to pass the blame for this attack onto
terrorists, onto our international partners, and even onto the
future mother-in-law of Yulia Skripal.
They even claimed that I, myself, invented Novichok.
Their attempts to hide the truth by pushing out a deluge of
disinformation simply reinforces their culpability.
As we made clear in March, only Russia had the technical means,
operational experience and motive to carry out the attack.
Novichok nerve agents were developed by the Soviet Union in the
1980s under a programme codenamed FOLIANT.
Within the past decade Russia has produced and stockpiled small
quantities of these agents, long after it signed the Chemical
Weapons Convention.
And during the 2000s, Russia commenced a programme to test means
of delivering nerve agents including by application to door
handles.
We were right to say in March that the Russian State was
responsible.
And now we have identified the individuals involved, we can go
even further.
Mr Speaker, just as the police investigation has enabled the CPS
to bring charges against the two suspects, so the Security and
Intelligence Agencies have carried out their own investigations
into the organisation behind this attack.
Based on this work, I can today tell the House that, based on a
body of intelligence, the Government has concluded that the two
individuals named by the police and CPS are officers from the
Russian military intelligence service, also known as the
GRU.
The GRU is a highly disciplined organisation with a
well-established chain of command.
So this was not a rogue operation. It was almost certainly also
approved outside the GRU at a senior level of the Russian state.
Mr Speaker, the House will appreciate that I cannot go into
details about the work of our security and intelligence agencies.
But we will be briefing Opposition leaders and others on Privy
Council terms and also giving further detail to the Intelligence
and Security Committee.
Let me turn to our response to this appalling attack and the
further knowledge we now have about those responsible.
First, with respect to the two individuals, as the Crown
Prosecution Service and Police announced earlier today, we have
obtained a European Arrest Warrant and will shortly issue an
Interpol red notice.
Of course, Russia has repeatedly refused to allow its nationals
to stand trial overseas, citing a bar on extradition in its
constitution.
So, as we found following the murder of Alexander Litvinenko, any
formal extradition request in this case would be futile.
But should either of these individuals ever again travel outside
Russia, we will take every possible step to detain them, to
extradite them and to bring them to face justice here in the
United Kingdom.
Mr Speaker, this chemical weapons attack on our soil was part of
a wider pattern of Russian behaviour that persistently seeks to
undermine our security and that of our allies around the
world.
They have fomented conflict in the Donbas, illegally annexed
Crimea, repeatedly violated the national airspace of several
European countries and mounted a sustained campaign of cyber
espionage and election interference.
They were behind a violent attempted coup in Montenegro. And a
Russian-made missile, launched from territory held by
Russian-backed separatists, brought down MH17.
We must step up our collective effort to protect ourselves in
response to this threat – and that is exactly what we have done
since the attack in March, both domestically and collectively
with our allies.
We have introduced a new power to detain people at the UK border
to determine whether they are engaged in hostile state activity.
We have introduced the Magnitsky amendment to the Sanctions and
Money Laundering Act in response to the violation of human
rights. And we have radically stepped up our activity against
illicit finance entering our country.
We also expelled 23 Russian diplomats who had been identified as
undeclared Russian intelligence officers, fundamentally degrading
Russian intelligence capability in the UK for years to come.
And in collective solidarity – and in recognition of the shared
threat posed to our allies – 28 other countries as well as NATO
joined us in expelling a total of over 150 Russian intelligence
officers: the largest collective expulsion ever.
Since then, the EU agreed a comprehensive package to tackle
hybrid threats.
The G7 agreed a Rapid Response Mechanism to share intelligence on
hostile state activity.
NATO has substantially strengthened its collective deterrence,
including through a new Cyber Operations Centre.
And the US has announced additional sanctions against Russia for
the Salisbury attack.
Mr Speaker, our allies acted in good faith - and the painstaking
work of our police and intelligence agencies over the last six
months further reinforces that they were right to do so.
Together, we will continue to show that those who attempt to
undermine the international rules based system cannot act with
impunity.
We will continue to press for all of the measures agreed so far
to be fully implemented, including the creation of a new EU
Chemical Weapons sanctions regime.
But we will not stop there.
We will also push for new EU sanctions regimes against those
responsible for cyber-attacks and gross human rights violations -
and for new listings under the existing regime against Russia.
And we will work with our partners to empower the OPCW to
attribute chemical weapons attacks to other states beyond
Syria.
Most significantly, Mr Speaker, what we have learnt from today’s
announcement is the specific nature of the threat from the
Russian GRU.
We know that the GRU has played a key part in malign Russian
activity in recent years.
And today we have exposed their role behind the despicable
chemical weapons attack on the streets of Salisbury.
The actions of the GRU are a threat to all our allies and to all
our citizens.
And on the basis of what we have learnt in the Salisbury
investigation - and what we know about this organisation more
broadly - we must now step up our collective efforts,
specifically against the GRU.
We are increasing our understanding of what the GRU is doing in
our countries, shining a light on their activities, exposing
their methods and sharing them with our allies, just as we have
done with Salisbury.
And, Mr Speaker, while the House will appreciate that I cannot go
into details, together with our allies we will deploy the full
range of tools from across our National Security apparatus in
order to counter the threat posed by the GRU.
I have said before, and I say again now, that the UK has no
quarrel with the Russian people.
And we continue to hold out hope that we will one day once again
enjoy a strong partnership with the Government of this great
nation.
As a fellow Permanent Member of the UN Security Council, we will
continue to engage Russia on topics of international peace and
security.
But we will also use these channels of communication to make
clear there can be no place in any civilised international order
for the kind of barbaric activity which we saw in Salisbury in
March.
Finally, Mr Speaker let me pay tribute to the fortitude of the
people of Salisbury, Amesbury and the surrounding areas, who have
faced such disruption to their daily lives over the past six
months.
Let me once again thank the outstanding efforts of the emergency
services and National Health Service in responding to these
incidents.
And let me thank all those involved in the police and
intelligence community for their tireless and painstaking work
which has led to today’s announcement.
Mr Speaker, back in March, Russia sought to sow doubt and
uncertainty about the evidence we presented to this House – and
some were minded to believe them.
Today’s announcement shows that we were right.
We were right to act against the Russian State in the way we did.
And we are right now to step up our efforts against the GRU.
We will not tolerate such barbaric acts against our
country.
And - together with our allies - this government will continue to
do whatever is necessary to keep our people safe.
And I commend this Statement to the House.
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