UK sanctions Russians it says developed chemical weapons used to kill Navalny
The measures freeze assets and ban travel for seven people and two institutes tied to Novichok and Epibatidine research, officials said.
- Britain imposed sanctions on nine Russian individuals and two scientific research institutes, SC Signal and GNIII VM, for developing chemical weapons used in attacks on Alexei Navalny and Sergei Skripal.
- The sanctions include asset freezes and travel bans targeting several scientists linked to Novichok and Epibatidine toxins.
- Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper condemned Russia's use of chemical weapons as violations of international law and a threat to global security.
- The UK Defense Ministry reported intercepting a Russian Bear-F aircraft that flew dangerously close to the HMS Prince of Wales carrier strike group in the Norwegian Sea and noted unsafe Russian military actions near British vessels involving F-35 jets.
68 Articles
68 Articles
British Government Sanctions Russians Linked to Navalny Poisoning
The British government has sanctioned seven individuals and two Russian scientific research institutes, which it accuses of being involved in the murder of opposition politician Alexei Navalny and a nerve agent attack in the English town of Salisbury in 2018. The UK Foreign Office said on July 6 that the sanctions were aimed at those involved in developing the deadly toxin epibatidine and the nerve agent novichok, which killed Navalny and a Bri…
Britain on Monday imposed sanctions on two Russian research institutes and their senior officials responsible for developing chemical weapons, including the substances used to poison Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny. He died in a Russian prison colony in February 2024, with European authorities saying the cause of his death was poisoning. Russian authorities deny any responsibility for the politician's death.
New UK sanctions target Russian scientists over toxic weapons claims
UK expands sanctions list amid claims of ongoing Russian chemical weapons program
Seven people and two Russian research institutes are accused of developing chemical weapons used to poison the Russian opponent in 2024 and a British mother in 2018.
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