Russia set to reopen city where Russian scientists say Novichok was made



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According to UK officials, the nerve agent used in the murder of ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in the English city of Salisbury in March was created at a facility in Shikhany, in the lower Saratov region of Russia.

Russia has a system of closed cities that can be traced back to the Cold War. They have been included in Kaliningrad and Vladivostok. They also included sites involved in the development and testing of nuclear weapons, much like the United States of America in the United States of America.

Shikhany, Russia, is part of the nuclear weapons complex, or as in the case of Shikhany, were involved in other research and development programs. They are largely off-limits to foreigners and access is tightly restricted.

The chemical weapons research center in Shikhany, around 600 miles south of Moscow, was developed by the Soviet Union and the place where the British believe the chemical Novichok used to poison the Skripals was made.

Yulia Skripal (19659003) The Announcement by Moscow comes just over a week after the death of Briton Dawn Sturgess, who was exposed to Novichok earlier this month. A man, Charlie Rowley, was

Sturgess and Rowley fell ill in the town of Amesbury in Wiltshire, about eight miles north of where the Skripals were poisoned.

 Dawn Sturgess died after being exposed to Novichok.

The denial of death. Russia's United Nations Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia blasted the UK during a Security Council meeting in April, calling the allegations a "fake story."

More than 20 countries, including the US, expelled Russian diplomats in a show of support for the UK

On Thursday, UK police identified two suspects in the poisoning of the Skripals, according to a source with knowledge of the investigation.

The pair left the UK in the wake of the attack

 Police find source of Novichok nerve agent that killed British woman

] Back in April, UK national security adviser Mark Sedwill outlined the role of NATO secretary General Jens Stoltenberg.

He also identified a branch of the Russian research institute at Shikhany sible for that work.

Novichok, which works by causing a slowing of the heart and restriction of the airways, is one of the world's rarest nerve agents.

It was developed in secret by the Soviet Union during the Cold War in the 1980s as a means of countering US defenses against chemical weapons, but was revealed to the world by train Soviet scientist and whistleblower Vil Mirzayanov

Mirzayanov told CNN that Novichok is up to 10 times as potent as VX, the weapon used to kill North Korean leader Kim Jong Un half-brother, Kim Jong Nam, in 2017.
"A lethal dose … and the person will die immediately. – vomiting, everything It's a terrible scene, "Mirzayanov said.

CNN's Nathan Hodge reported from Moscow. James Masters wrote from London. Judith Vonberg in London and Darya Tarasova in Moscow

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