'Risk of more Novichok attacks not shared with public'

Officers wearing white full-body PPE inspecting bins. They are wearing purple gloves.Image source, PA Media
Image caption,

The Novichok poisonings were "unprecedented", the inquiry has previously been told

  • Published

Health officials had warned early on of the risk that someone might come into contact with the discarded nerve agent Novichok, an inquiry has heard.

However, this was not shared with the public partly amid fears it could create "anxiety", a witness from Public Health England, named V13A for anonymity, told an inquiry on Thursday.

The organisation was tasked with mitigating the risks to the wider public and giving safety advice after ex-Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were poisoned in Salisbury in March 2018, but survived.

The witness was giving evidence at an inquiry into the death of Dawn Sturgess, 44, who died in July the same year after being exposed to the nerve agent.

By mid-March 2018, the Department of Health had devised a worst case scenario suggesting that people could die by coming into contact with a container of the nerve agent.

Witness V13A was asked by the inquiry about a document which cautioned against advising the public not to pick up items they had not dropped which it said could 'stoke panic'.

Image caption,

Yulia and Sergei Skripal were critically ill for several weeks

But the inquiry heard that while this advice was considered, it had not been acted on until after Ms Sturgess died four months later when public advice was issued to warn people in the Salisbury area to not pick up litter.

Counsel to the inquiry, Emilie Pottle asked the witness whether there was a basis from the behavioural scientists about the "panic that could ensue whether the advice was given".

V13A suggested those were the words that had come from a Department of Health and Social Care official.

Ms Pottle then replied with: "So stoking panic was not one of your reasons".

V13A said she would have used the word "anxiety".

Wiltshire Police chief Catherine Roper has reassured public on any ongoing Novichok risk in Salisbury.

"There's absolutely nothing to indicate that this is a circumstance we'll be experiencing again," she said.

"We have strengthened our relationship with all of our partners and many of them have been giving evidence during the inquiry so we are aligned, working closely together and there is nothing to indicate any concern."

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