Oh dear, it seems to be that those in the hallowed halls of Government who like to glean more expenses from
the public coffers and who enjoy a fine living arriving at conclusions that are palatable to those they allegedly
serve, have decided to begin a long-delayed inquiry into something that happened six years ago.
On the Rogue Nation archived website, we did a quite intensive probe ourselves into the semi-failed Novichok
poisoning of a former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia, an investigation firmly set
alongside the news reports from the mainstream media.
Today in 2024, the focus seems to be on the only death in this incident, a Ms. Dawn Sturgess. The narrative
has changed from the factual to a-more emotive slant and I would suggest certain realities will be 'ironed-out'
to offer a different view of who the external casualties of this case were.
................................
The story goes that former-Colonel Sergei Skripal was living a low-key life in the English town of Salisbury in
2018 and staying off the radar after being convicted by Russian authorities in 2006 of spying for Britain.
When the US swapped him and three others for undisclosed reasons in 2010, Skripal was sentenced to
thirteen years imprisonment by the Moscow Regional Military Court, but pardoned in the same year by
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
With the UK's MI6's assistance, Sergei Skripal -now devoid of rank, and with his wife moved to Salisbury and
continued to provide information to the UK and other Western intelligence agencies for some time afterwards.
His wife -Lyudmila, passed away in 2012 due to cancer and Sergei lived alone in a house he'd purchased a
year earlier in Salisbury. She was buried near their son -Alexander, who died in St Petersburg 2017, but he
was somehow transferred to the UK six years after the Skripals had decided to live in Salisbury.
Salisbury.
Yulia. Sergei.
Back to March of 2018 and his 33-year-old daughter -Yulia, decided to travel from Moscow and visit her sixty-six
year-old father at his modern Wiltshire home in a quiet cul-de-sac. During a walk around the shopping centre of
Salisbury, Sergei began to feel light-headed and Yulia took him to a park bench in a children's small play area
in order to rest and this is where the true story began.
Of course, the information provided below has vanished from the original BBC link offered in the archived RN site,
the security services of the UK and the state-funded news-outlet are paid by the same people!!
...........................
Originally posted on their site by the BBC 8th October 2018 and yet oddly found on the archived Rogue Nation
website 15th March 2018, 01:51pm. There's no 'update' comment from the BBC at the time of writing.
Source:
A BBC timeline:
*Yulia Skripal flew into London's Heathrow Airport on a flight from Russia at about 14:40 GMT on 3 March.
*On 4 March, at about 13:40 GMT, Mr Skripal and his daughter arrived at the Sainbury's upper level car park
in Salisbury city centre.
*Police said the pair went to the Bishop's Mill pub before going to Zizzi restaurant at 14:20 GMT, staying until
15:35 GMT.
*At 16:15 GMT emergency services received the first report of an incident.
*Police found the pair on a bench outside Zizzi restaurant in an "extremely serious condition".
*A police officer who fell ill after attending the incident - Det Sgt Nick Bailey - was also taken to hospital and
remains in a serious condition.
*Of the 38 [The BBC later updated this to 48] people who have been seen in hospital in relation to the incident,
34 have been discharged.
*Only Mr Skripal, his daughter Yulia and Det Sgt Bailey remain in hospital.
*One person is being monitored as an outpatient but is not showing any signs of exposure.
............................
To help, here's the 14th October 2024 from Wikpedia.
'On 4 March 2018, Skripal and his 33-year-old daughter Yulia, who was visiting from Moscow, were found
"slipping in and out of consciousness on a public bench" near a shopping centre in Salisbury by a doctor
and nurse who were passing by. While at Salisbury District Hospital, they were put into induced comas
to prevent organ damage.
Following the incident, health authorities checked 21 members of the emergency services and the public
for symptoms. Two police officers were treated for possible minor symptoms, said to be itchy eyes and
wheezing, while a third, Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey, who had been sent to Sergei Skripal's house,
was in a serious condition.
By 22 March 2018, Detective Sergeant Bailey had recovered enough to be discharged from the hospital,
and by 15 January 2019, he returned to active duty...'
............................
Basically, that was it for now. A pardoned ex-double agent had an attempt on his life by what was presumed
the Russian Government and his daughter was collateral damage. Those bad Ruskies had done it and after
some time, the pair recovered from something called 'Novichok'.
Where Sergei and Yulia went after this attempted poisoning, nobody knows and for a short time, the media
and ourselves resigned themselves on chewing with speculation. 'The poison was administered in the play-area
by someone passing the bench, the stuff was smeared on Sergei's front-door handle...' and on it went.
Yer' gotta keep those dwindling ratings going.
March marched on and it wouldn't be until late July of 2018, when two other characters stumbled onto this stage
of spy-craft intrigue, a brace of people not usually held in such regard by the BBC as appropriate players in their
usual style of reporting.
(A running commentary of the current inquiry)
(To Be Continued)
the public coffers and who enjoy a fine living arriving at conclusions that are palatable to those they allegedly
serve, have decided to begin a long-delayed inquiry into something that happened six years ago.
On the Rogue Nation archived website, we did a quite intensive probe ourselves into the semi-failed Novichok
poisoning of a former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia, an investigation firmly set
alongside the news reports from the mainstream media.
Today in 2024, the focus seems to be on the only death in this incident, a Ms. Dawn Sturgess. The narrative
has changed from the factual to a-more emotive slant and I would suggest certain realities will be 'ironed-out'
to offer a different view of who the external casualties of this case were.
................................
The story goes that former-Colonel Sergei Skripal was living a low-key life in the English town of Salisbury in
2018 and staying off the radar after being convicted by Russian authorities in 2006 of spying for Britain.
When the US swapped him and three others for undisclosed reasons in 2010, Skripal was sentenced to
thirteen years imprisonment by the Moscow Regional Military Court, but pardoned in the same year by
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
With the UK's MI6's assistance, Sergei Skripal -now devoid of rank, and with his wife moved to Salisbury and
continued to provide information to the UK and other Western intelligence agencies for some time afterwards.
His wife -Lyudmila, passed away in 2012 due to cancer and Sergei lived alone in a house he'd purchased a
year earlier in Salisbury. She was buried near their son -Alexander, who died in St Petersburg 2017, but he
was somehow transferred to the UK six years after the Skripals had decided to live in Salisbury.
Salisbury.
Yulia. Sergei.
Back to March of 2018 and his 33-year-old daughter -Yulia, decided to travel from Moscow and visit her sixty-six
year-old father at his modern Wiltshire home in a quiet cul-de-sac. During a walk around the shopping centre of
Salisbury, Sergei began to feel light-headed and Yulia took him to a park bench in a children's small play area
in order to rest and this is where the true story began.
Of course, the information provided below has vanished from the original BBC link offered in the archived RN site,
the security services of the UK and the state-funded news-outlet are paid by the same people!!
...........................
Originally posted on their site by the BBC 8th October 2018 and yet oddly found on the archived Rogue Nation
website 15th March 2018, 01:51pm. There's no 'update' comment from the BBC at the time of writing.
Source:
A BBC timeline:
*Yulia Skripal flew into London's Heathrow Airport on a flight from Russia at about 14:40 GMT on 3 March.
*On 4 March, at about 13:40 GMT, Mr Skripal and his daughter arrived at the Sainbury's upper level car park
in Salisbury city centre.
*Police said the pair went to the Bishop's Mill pub before going to Zizzi restaurant at 14:20 GMT, staying until
15:35 GMT.
*At 16:15 GMT emergency services received the first report of an incident.
*Police found the pair on a bench outside Zizzi restaurant in an "extremely serious condition".
*A police officer who fell ill after attending the incident - Det Sgt Nick Bailey - was also taken to hospital and
remains in a serious condition.
*Of the 38 [The BBC later updated this to 48] people who have been seen in hospital in relation to the incident,
34 have been discharged.
*Only Mr Skripal, his daughter Yulia and Det Sgt Bailey remain in hospital.
*One person is being monitored as an outpatient but is not showing any signs of exposure.
............................
To help, here's the 14th October 2024 from Wikpedia.
'On 4 March 2018, Skripal and his 33-year-old daughter Yulia, who was visiting from Moscow, were found
"slipping in and out of consciousness on a public bench" near a shopping centre in Salisbury by a doctor
and nurse who were passing by. While at Salisbury District Hospital, they were put into induced comas
to prevent organ damage.
Following the incident, health authorities checked 21 members of the emergency services and the public
for symptoms. Two police officers were treated for possible minor symptoms, said to be itchy eyes and
wheezing, while a third, Detective Sergeant Nick Bailey, who had been sent to Sergei Skripal's house,
was in a serious condition.
By 22 March 2018, Detective Sergeant Bailey had recovered enough to be discharged from the hospital,
and by 15 January 2019, he returned to active duty...'
............................
Basically, that was it for now. A pardoned ex-double agent had an attempt on his life by what was presumed
the Russian Government and his daughter was collateral damage. Those bad Ruskies had done it and after
some time, the pair recovered from something called 'Novichok'.
Where Sergei and Yulia went after this attempted poisoning, nobody knows and for a short time, the media
and ourselves resigned themselves on chewing with speculation. 'The poison was administered in the play-area
by someone passing the bench, the stuff was smeared on Sergei's front-door handle...' and on it went.
Yer' gotta keep those dwindling ratings going.
March marched on and it wouldn't be until late July of 2018, when two other characters stumbled onto this stage
of spy-craft intrigue, a brace of people not usually held in such regard by the BBC as appropriate players in their
usual style of reporting.
(A running commentary of the current inquiry)
(To Be Continued)
Read The TV Guide, yer' don't need a TV.