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New Book Allegedly Sheds Light on Skripals' Life After Poisoning

© AP Photo / ITNIn this Feb. 27, 2018 grab taken from CCTV video provided by ITN on Wednesday, March 7, 2018 , former spy Sergei Skripal shops at a store in Salisbury, England
In this Feb. 27, 2018 grab taken from CCTV video provided by ITN on Wednesday, March 7, 2018 , former spy Sergei Skripal shops at a store in Salisbury, England - Sputnik International
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In a book entitled, “The Skripal Files,” BBC journalist Mike Urban has described the former Russian intelligence officer as an “unashamed nationalist,” who initially refused to believe that he could have been the target of a Kremlin “murder plot” in the wake of the Salisbury poisoning.

The author of “The Skripal Files,” Mike Urban, has offered some details on Sergei and Yulia Skripal’s life after the alleged poisoning attack in Salisbury. According to the BBC journalist, the ex-GRU colonel and his daughter keep in touch with their friends using social media and e-mail, although they try to avoid any contact with reporters.

“They communicate with people via social media, e-mails. Some saw them. We know that Yulia’s friend from Russia visited her in June. So, the Skripals are seeing their friends,” Urban said, adding that it was wrong to think that the two were isolated from society. “They simply do not really want to see us, the journalists.”

The book, which is based on Urban’s 2017 interview with Sergei Skripal and is slated to hit the shelves this week, also suggested that the ex-intelligence officer was an “unashamed Russian nationalist.”

READ MORE: Sergei Skripal Did Not Believe Moscow Poisoned Him, New Book Claims

He allegedly spent most of his day watching Russian TV channels, adopting “the Kremlin line in many matters even while sitting in his MI6-purchased house,” Urban wrote.

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May, centre, is briefed by members of the police as she views the area where former Russian double agent Sergei Skripal and his daughter were found critically ill, in Salisbury, England, Thursday, March 15, 2018 - Sputnik International
UK Using 'Skripal Case' to Increase Pressure on Russia - Foreign Ministry
The journalist further suggested that Skripal initially refused to believe that the Russian government might want to target him – when he woke up from a coma, he had to deal with some “difficult psychological adjustments.”

On March 4, Sergei and Yulia were found unconscious in the British town of Salisbury after allegedly being exposed to what the UK claimed was the Novichok nerve agent, with doctors claiming that the two might never fully recover.

In light of the purported poisoning attack, the UK government immediately announced that it was “highly likely” that Russia was behind the “attempted murder,” without having any evidence to corroborate those claims.

READ MORE: Skripal's Niece Wants to Meet Salisbury Case 'Suspects' Personally

In response, Russia flatly rejected the allegations and instead offered to assist in the investigation of the incident – London, however, ignored the proposal, refusing to provide samples of the substance allegedly used against the Skripal family.

A police officer near the Mill pub in Salisbury, where the traces of the nerve agent used to poison former Main Intelligence Directorate colonel Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia were found - Sputnik International
Russia Still Denied Opportunity to Receive Any Data on Skripal Case - Kremlin
The disagreements rapidly evolved into a diplomatic row, with the UK Prime Minister, Theresa May, announcing the expulsion of 23 Russian diplomats, and later encouraging the country’s EU allies and transatlantic partners to follow suit.

Moscow struck back with symmetrical measures, declaring the equivalent number of diplomatic workers personae non gratae.

Despite the medics’ initial prognosis, both Sergei and Yulia recovered and were discharged from the Salisbury hospital; their whereabouts, however, remain unknown. While Yulia gave an exclusive interview to Reuters, her father has been avoiding the public eye.

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