According to Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons Russian permanent representative Alexander Shulgin, London has attempted to use the international body to support the results of its own investigation.
"Contrary to the protocol of action prescribed in the Convention on the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, our British partners, using procedural tricks, requested technical assistance from the OPCW's technical secretariat in order confirm via independent expertise the results of their national investigation," Shulgin said, speaking at a press conference in The Hague following a meeting of the OPCW executive council.
Russia, Iran and China presented the OPCW with a proposal for a joint investigation into the Skripal case, Shulgin said. This project envisioned a joint probe by Russia and the UK, as well as the clarification of all issues related to accusations directed against Moscow by London. The three countries called on the OPCW's executive council to instruct the director of the organization's technical secretariat to take all necessary measures to establish such joint work. The proposal called for a very important role to be assigned to technical secretariat director Ahmet Uzumcu to help find the truth surrounding the Skripal poisoning.
Unfortunately, Moscow's proposals for such a joint investigation into the Skripal case were not met with support from Russia's Western partners. On the contrary, Shulgin said, Western countries attempted to upset the normal progress of the OPCW session in the Skripal case, resorting to "slanderous attacks on the Russian Federation."
Shulgin emphasized that Russia would accept the results of any national or international investigation into the Skripal case so long as it includes Russian experts, is transparent, and based on provable facts.
The official stressed that there is "growing understanding" in the international community that the situation surrounding the poisoning case is not normal, adding that Russia would continue to work within an international legal framework in searching for a resolution to the problem. "There is a lot of work ahead, and we will continue to try to bring the situation back into the framework of international law," Shulgin said.
Russian ex-spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were hospitalized in Salisbury, southern England on March 4 following what is thought to be a chemical attack involving the A-234 nerve agent. Sergei Skripal remains in critical condition; Yulia Skripal has awakened from a coma and is making a recovery. London blamed Moscow for the attack and initiated a series of measures, including the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats and the freeze of bilateral contacts. Russia has denied the British government's allegations, saying claims of Russian involvement are unsubstantiated.