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Ex-Russian spy critically ill after ‘unknown substance’ exposure

** FILE ** In this Wednesday, Aug. 9, 2006 file picture Sergei Skripal speaks to his lawyer from behind bars seen on a screen of a monitor outside a courtroom in Moscow.Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has signed a decree pardoning four convicted foreign spies so they can be exchanged for 10 people accused of spying for Russia in the United States, the Kremlin said Friday, July 9, 2010, Sergei Skripal is one of them.(AP Photo/Misha Japaridze)

By Solange Reyner From Newsmax

A man exposed to an “unknown substance” in Salisbury, England, on Sunday was identified as Sergei Skripal, a Russian national convicted of spying for Britain, BBC reports.

Skripal, 66, and a woman were found unconscious on a bench near a shopping area and were taken to a nearby hospital where they were treated. The two are still in critical condition and the hospital and a number of locations in Salsbury were cordoned off in relation to the incident.

The substance has yet to be confirmed by Public Health England, although some reports indicate the pair might have been exposed to the powerful opiate fentanyl, and U.K. police have not determined whether a crime was committed.

Freya Church told the BBC it looked like the two people had taken “something quite strong.”

“On the bench there was a couple, an older guy and a younger girl. She was sort of leant in on him, it looked like she had passed out maybe,” she said. “He was doing some strange hand movements, looking up to the sky.”

Skripal arrived in the UK as part of a high-profile spy swap in 2010, and was one of four Russians exchanged for 10 deep cover sleeper agents planted by Moscow in the U.S., according to the U.K.’s Mirror. He reportedly started work as a double agent in the 1990s, but was convicted of passing the identities of Moscow agents working undercover in Europe to MI6 in 2006, receiving $1000,000 in cash for the information.

He was convicted of “high treason in the form of espionage,” later that year and sentenced to 13 years in prison.

Some reports have compared the incident to the poisoning of former KGB officer Alexander Litvinenko, who was killed in November of 2006 after he drank tea laced with polonium 2010 in a London hotel during a meeting with a Russian businessman. An inquiry in 2016 indicated Russian President Vladimir Putin likely approved the assassination.

For more on this story go to: https://www.newsmax.com/newsfront/spy-england-critically-ill-poisoning/2018/03/05/id/846912/?ns_mail_uid=64942667&ns_mail_job=1782376_03062018&s=al&dkt_nbr=010104l2tmql

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