Emergency service vehicles used after Novichok poisonings found buried in landfill site

Emergency services vehicles used in response to the Novichok poisonings have been buried in a landfill site close to a village of 13,000 people.

The Russian nerve agent killed Dawn Sturgess, 44, and left her boyfriend Charlie Rowley, 45, fighting for his life.

They were believed to have picked up a vial containing the substance which was used to poison former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia earlier in the year.

And it left her boyfriend Charlie Rowley, 45, fighting for his life

The Russian nerve agent killed Dawn Sturgess (left), 44, and left her boyfriend Charlie Rowley (right), 45, fighting for his life

Authorities were faced with a decision about whether to incinerate vehicles which may have been contaminated, or whether to bury them in landfill, and decided on the latter option.

The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) confirmed that some vehicles have been buried at Wingmoor Farm, near Bishops Cleeve, and more will follow.

A Defra spokesman said: ‘The clean-up work in south Wiltshire has been underway for some time and any potentially contaminated items continue to be removed and stored securely before being disposed of safely.

‘As part of this work, following review by specialist teams, some of the vehicles involved in the response to the incident in March have been moved to a hazardous waste landfill site.

‘Our number one priority is making sure that the identified sites are safe, so they can be returned to use and Wiltshire can get back to normal.

A police car is taken away by military personnel days after the March attack on the Skripals 

A police car is taken away by military personnel days after the March attack on the Skripals 

Authorities were faced with a decision about whether to incinerate vehicles which may have been contaminated, or whether to bury them in landfill, and decided on the latter option (Pictured: Police officers search the home of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury in March)

Authorities were faced with a decision about whether to incinerate vehicles which may have been contaminated, or whether to bury them in landfill, and decided on the latter option (Pictured: Police officers search the home of Sergei Skripal in Salisbury in March)

‘There is absolutely no risk to the public of using hazardous waste landfill sites.

‘These locations are fully sealed and highly regulated to ensure waste is disposed of safely.

‘This is controlled by regulation, overseen by the Environment Agency, which specifically ensures that sites are not prone to flooding or other hazards.’

The landfill site is one of a small number in the UK which still takes hazardous waste.

The website of Grundon Waste Management Limited says the site ‘has the continued capacity to accept a wide range of packaged and bulk hazardous wastes’.

Police in chemical hazard suits remove the Salisbury bench where Russians Sergei Skripal and Yulia Skripal were found poisoned in March 

Police in chemical hazard suits remove the Salisbury bench where Russians Sergei Skripal and Yulia Skripal were found poisoned in March 

Councillor Tony Mackinnon, who sits on Bishop’s Cleeve Parish Council, said: ‘The number of checks and surveys that have been made over the years, largely as a result of local groups, have pretty much confirmed that the operations at the site are safe.

‘We’ve done air quality and dust tests and tests of lots of potential different pollutants and they were well within safe limits.

‘I would have thought the risk to the public is as close to nil as one can get.’

He added: ‘It’s something that will be of interest to the public but it certainly shouldn’t be something that alarms them.

‘The risk is vanishingly small, I would have thought.’

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