Russian TV news head hints at country’s role in Skripal poisoning

Editor of state-owned RT network Margarita Simonyan appears to contradict Kremlin position in post about Darya Dugina killing

The influential head of Russia’s RT news network has hinted at Russia’s role in the poisoning of the former spy Sergei Skripal, in a remarkable post that contradicts the Kremlin’s official position on the incident.

In a post on her Telegram channel on Monday, Margarita Simonyan appeared to acknowledge Russia’s part in the Skripal poisoning when she wrote that Russian “professionals who want to admire spires” should travel to Estonia to go after the alleged killer of Darya Dugina, the daughter of an ultra-nationalist Russian ideologue who was killed in a car bomb on Saturday night.

Russia has accused Ukraine’s intelligence services of carrying out the murder of Dugina, and said the allegedly perpetrator fled across the Russian border into Estonia shortly after committing the murder.

“Dasha’s killers are already in Estonia. Estonia, of course, will not extradite them. I am sure we have professionals who want to admire the spires in the vicinity of Tallinn,” Simonyan wrote, a clear reference to the two Russian GRU agents – Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov – accused of poisoning Sergei and Yulia Skripal on UK soil in March 2018.

The two men, who have since been charged by the UK over the poisoning in Wiltshire, famously told Simonyan in an interview with RT in 2018 that they were travelling to the “wonderful” Salisbury as tourists to visit the city’s “world-famous 123-metre spire”.

Russia has always vehemently denied any involvement in the poisoning, although Vladimir Putin has previously called the double agent Skripal a “scumbag” and a “traitor”.

Simonyan is said to have a direct line to the Kremlin on her desk and was given an award by Putin for “objectivity” after the annexation of Crimea in 2014.

It would not be the first time that Russia has changed its official line on a major development. Weeks after Russia annexed Crimea, Putin admitted he had “of course” deployed troops to the peninsula, having earlier insisted that the troops were “local self-defence forces”.

Contributor

Pjotr Sauer

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Putin demands Russian consular access to Yulia Skripal
Moscow wants role in investigation into poisoning of former spy and his daughter

Andrew Roth in Moscow

07, Jun, 2018 @3:01 PM

Article image
Skripal poisoning: suspects are civilians, not criminals, says Putin
Russian president says two men accused by UK of being behind attack have been identified

Andrew Roth and Dan Sabbagh

12, Sep, 2018 @2:06 PM

Article image
Sergei Skripal scandal has sent UK-Russia relations tumbling. What next?
Many options will be on table should Kremlin involvement be confirmed. None will be simple

Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

13, Mar, 2018 @10:01 AM

Article image
Suspected Skripal poisoning: who might have ordered it and why?
Theory explored that the Russian state targeted ‘traitorous’ spy to demonstrate risks of links with foreign intelligence agencies

Shaun Walker

07, Mar, 2018 @5:00 AM

Article image
Russian broadcaster RT could be forced off UK airwaves
Channel could lose licence if Russia found to be responsible for Sergei Skripal poisoning

Mark Sweney

13, Mar, 2018 @3:36 PM

Article image
RT faces seven new investigations in aftermath of Salisbury poisoning
Ofcom is examining instances where Kremlin-backed news channel potentially breached UK broadcast laws on impartiality

Jim Waterson media editor

18, Apr, 2018 @11:38 AM

Article image
Western allies expel scores of Russian diplomats over Skripal attack
US orders expulsion of 60 officials as succession of EU states announce similar moves

Julian Borger in Washington and Patrick Wintour and Heather Stewart in London

27, Mar, 2018 @6:04 AM

Article image
Russian counter-propaganda exploiting UK weaknesses over spy poisoning
Scientific research and political rhetoric operate at different velocities, leaving a gap that Moscow has exploited

Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor

04, Apr, 2018 @1:19 PM

Article image
Russian voices in western media leave regulators with new type of headache
The political debate over Kremlin-backed RT raises questions about limits of free expression

Emily Bell

18, Mar, 2018 @2:30 PM

Article image
Nato expels seven staff from Russian mission over Skripal poisoning
Nato chief says move sends ‘clear and very strong message that there is a cost to Russia’s reckless actions’

Patrick Wintour Diplomatic editor and Julian Borger in Washington

27, Mar, 2018 @2:21 PM