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After months of conflict and tens of thousands of deaths, fighting continues between Israel and Hamas, with the Middle East appearing to be on the brink of a wider war.

In this story, Sky News looks back at what has happened between the Hamas attacks on 7 October 2023 and the same date a year later.

The renewed conflict has raged for months and has seen an escalation between Israel and Iran and the most dangerous situation on the border with Lebanon for many years.

Middle East conflict latest – blasts heard after part of Beirut told to ‘evacuate immediately’

What follows is by no means an exhaustive timeline, but it aims to capture some of the more salient moments in the devastating conflict.

Hamas attack and Israeli retaliation

A destroyed Israeli tank at the Gaza Strip fence east of Khan Younis. Pic: AP
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A destroyed Israeli tank at the Gaza Strip fence on 7 October. Pic: AP

On 7 October, Hamas gunmen launch an attack on southern Israel, rampaging through communities and killing 1,200 people.

Some 250 people are taken back to Gaza, according to Israeli tallies, where they are held captive. The status of the hostages becomes a central issue of the renewed conflict.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declares that Israel is at war and orders airstrikes on Gaza, along with a total siege of the densely populated territory.

Explosions in Gaza City
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Explosions in Gaza City as Israel strikes Hamas on 7 October

Israel ground offensive into Gaza

On 13 October, Israel tells residents of Gaza City, where more than a million people live, to evacuate and move south.

The same day, Israel Defence Force (IDF) troops move into the Gaza Strip in what is described as a raid.

An explosion at the al Ahli hospital in Gaza City on 17 October triggers outrage in the Arab world, but there is disagreement and confusion about who is behind it.

Later the same month Israel launches its large-scale ground assault on Gaza, marking the beginning of its invasion of the territory.

Al Shifa hospital

Palestinians inspect damage in the area around Al Shifa Hospital. Pic: Reuters
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Palestinians inspect damage in the area around the al Shifa hospital. Pic: Reuters

On 15 November, Israeli troops enter Gaza’s biggest hospital, al Shifa, in Gaza City, after a siege lasting several days during which medical staff say patients including newborn babies died from a lack of power and supplies.

The IDF says the hospital has been used to conceal an underground Hamas HQ, a claim that hospital staff deny.

Within a few more weeks, all hospitals serving the northern half of Gaza cease functioning.

November ceasefire

After weeks of fighting, Israel and Hamas announce the first truce of the war. They agree to pause fighting for four days to exchange women and child hostages held in Gaza for Palestinian women and teenagers detained or jailed by Israel on security grounds, and allow in more aid.

The ceasefire would eventually be extended for a week in total and lead to the freeing of 105 hostages and about 240 Palestinian detainees.

War resumes on 1 December. Days later, Israeli forces launch their first big ground assault on southern Gaza, on the outskirts of the city of Khan Younis.

On 6 December, 22 members of the same family are killed in an Israeli airstrike at the Jabalia refugee camp in northern Gaza.

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Moment US vetoes ceasefire resolution

Two days later, the US vetoes a UN Security Council demand for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire. The UK abstains.

On 15 December, three Israeli hostages are killed by IDF troops who mistakenly open fire on them.

Two of them are killed in an initial volley of gunfire, while the third dies 15 minutes later after being urged to come out by the IDF and is then fired upon.

US and Britain launch airstrikes on Yemen

US launches planes in airstrike operation over Yemen, targeting Houthi bases
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US launches planes in airstrike operation over Yemen, targeting Houthi bases. Pic: US Central Command

Continued attacks on Red Sea shipping by Houthi rebels during this time cause major concerns for international trade.

On 11 January 2024, the US and UK launch dozens of airstrikes across Yemen in retaliation.

The Houthis say five of their fighters have been killed in the initial strikes, and vow to continue their attacks on shipping.

On the same day, the International Court of Justice hear opening statements in a case in which South Africa accuse Israel of committing a state-led genocide campaign against the Palestinian population. Israel denies the accusation.

Death toll surpasses 30,000

On 22 January, 21 IDF soldiers are killed in central Gaza in a single incident – the deadliest day for Israel’s forces since the war began.

At the end of February, the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza says the number of deaths in the territory since 7 October has risen above 30,000.

It says most of those killed are women and children and warns that the real figure is likely to be higher.

At this time there is widespread international concern about Israel’s plan to launch a military offensive into the southern city of Rafah, where more than a million people are sheltering.

The UN warns that a famine is imminent in northern Gaza and says 1.1m people are starving.

On 1 April, seven aid workers from World Central Kitchen are killed in an Israeli military strike in Gaza. Three British nationals are among the dead.

An Israeli investigation finds that incorrect assumptions, decision-making mistakes and violations of the rules of engagement had resulted in their deaths.

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Iran and Israel trade salvos

Escalating tensions between Israel and Iran boil over in April.

Tehran alleges that an Israeli strike on its embassy in the Syrian capital, Damascus, has killed several Iranian officers including a top general.

In retaliation it launches a barrage of dozens of missiles and drones at Israel on 13 April. The vast majority are intercepted.

Amid international concern about a regional crisis, Israel responds by striking a number of targets in Iran.

Tehran plays down the impact of the attack near a major military airbase and a nuclear site in the central city of Isfahan, but satellite photos suggest an air defence radar was hit.

Also in April, tens of thousands of people take part in anti-government protests in Israel, urging Mr Netanyahu to reach a ceasefire deal for the release of hostages. It follows months of other demonstrations against the government.

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‘My brother was kidnapped’

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‘Everything is destroyed’

May: Negotiations in Cairo fail to produce ceasefire

Talks in the Egyptian capital aimed at getting Israel and Hamas to agree terms for a ceasefire come under the spotlight in early May.

Hopes of a breakthrough when Hamas announce it has accepted a ceasefire proposed by Egypt and Qatar are dashed after an Israeli official called it a “ruse”.

People on the streets of Rafah celebrate after Hamas’s announcement, but hours later the Israeli military says it is conducting strikes in the city.

Outcry after strike on Rafah kills 45

There is international outrage after an Israeli airstrike on Rafah kills 45 people in late May.

According to Palestinian medics, the strike hits tents for displaced people and Hamas-run authorities in Gaza say “most” of the dead are women and children.

Mr Netanyahu says it was a “tragic mistake”, while the head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees says the city has become “hell on earth” following the deadly strike there.

Hostage rescue amid heavy death toll

In early June, four hostages are rescued in an Israeli raid in Gaza.

Hailed as “heroic” in Israel, the military says it freed the hostages under heavy fire and responded with strikes “from the air and from the street”.

But the ensuing attack on central Gaza’s al Nuseirat, a historic Palestinian refugee camp, led to scenes like a “horror movie”, according to residents.

Court ruling on Israel settlement policy

On 19 July, the International Court of Justice rules that Israel’s settlement policy in occupied Palestinian territories is in breach of international law.

The “transfer by Israel of settlers to the West Bank and Jerusalem as well as Israel’s maintenance of their presence” is “contrary to article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention”, a panel of 15 judges from around the world say.

The court says Israel must end the construction of settlements immediately – acts which render “Israel’s presence in the occupied Palestinian territory unlawful”.

Netanyahu visits US

US Vice Kamala President Harris meets with Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington
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Kamala Harris meets with Benjamin Netanyahu in Washington DC. Pic: Reuters

Mr Netanyahu embarks on a controversial visit to the US in late July and pledges in a scathing speech to Congress to achieve “total victory” against Hamas.

But Kamala Harris says she will “not be silent” over the dire humanitarian situation in Gaza following a meeting with the Israeli PM.

Ms Harris says Israel has a right to defend itself, but pointedly adds: “How it does so matters.”

Escalating tensions with Hezbollah

A couple of days later, Mr Netanyahu vows heavy retaliation after a strike in the Israel-occupied Golan Heights kills 12 children.

He blames the Hezbollah group for the rocket, which struck a football field in Majdal Shams. Hezbollah denies having any role in the attack.

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Brits urged to leave Lebanon

Following this, the IDF carries out what it says is a retaliatory strike on Beirut and kills Fuad Shukr, a senior Hezbollah commander who Israel says was responsible for the Majdal Shams attack.

Hamas leader killed

In a seismic event, Hamas’s top political leader Ismail Haniyeh is killed in an apparent assassination in Iran at the end of July.

Hamas later says Haniyeh died in an airstrike and blames Israel, which had vowed to kill Haniyeh and other leaders of Hamas following the 7 October attacks.

Yahya Sinwar, the mastermind behind those attacks, is named the new leader of Hamas days later.

FILE PHOTO: Haniyeh talks to his supporters during a Hamas rally marking the anniversary of the death of its leaders killed by Israel, in Gaza
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Ismail Haniyeh’s death was a significant moment in the conflict. Pic: Reuters

Fallout from assassinations

On 10 August, dozens of people are killed in an Israeli strike on a school-turned-shelter in Gaza City, according to officials in Gaza’s Hamas-run government.

The Israeli army says it struck a “Hamas control centre” but does not provide evidence and Hamas denies having a base at the school.

As August continues, the region waits with baited breath to see how and if Iran and Hezbollah will respond to the recent assassinations – or if a ceasefire can be agreed.

Fresh ceasefire talks

Peace talks resume in Qatar, as Iran says it “will only hold back if [a] ceasefire [is] agreed”.

President Biden says he is “optimistic” about a deal, but this is rejected by Hamas which says there have been “no improvements”.

No deal is agreed and the conflict continues.

Read more:
The 97 hostages who haven’t returned home to Israel

Who is Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei?
Netanyahu: Israel’s longest-serving leader

Fire exchange with Hezbollah

In late August, Israel carries out what it says were “pre-emptive” airstrikes against Hezbollah in Lebanon.

Israeli military spokesman, Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari, says the group were “starting to get ready to attack us”.

Hezbollah fires drones and rockets in what is says was a response to the killing of Fuad Shukr the previous month.

In Gaza, a tentative agreement for a series of brief ceasefires so that the polio vaccine can be distributed is agreed.

Exploding pagers

On 17 September, the unprecedented mass explosion of handheld pagers used by Hezbollah members in Lebanon kills 12 people and injures nearly 3,000, sending shockwaves through the region.

Less than 24 hours later, a similar series of explosions hits two-way radios used by the group.

The remains of what is said to be one of the exploding pagers
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The remains of what is said to be one of the exploding pagers

Israel is widely believed to be behind the attacks, which if true would be a huge intelligence victory and suggestive of deep infiltration of Hezbollah’s supply chain.

Hezbollah’s leader accuses Israel of carrying out “massacres” with the pager and walkie-talkie explosions, saying it wanted to kill “5,000 people in two minutes”.

Hassan Nasrallah killed

As Hezbollah reels from the pager and radio explosions, Israel targets Beirut with a series of attacks and kills the militant group’s leader, Hassan Nasrallah.

Iranian demonstrators hold posters of slain Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah during an anti-Israeli protest after his death. Pic: AP
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Iranian demonstrators hold posters of slain Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah. Pic: AP

The killing is a monumental event and there are fears that a wider war is now inevitable.

In late September, these fears only deepen as IDF tanks are seen at the Israel-Lebanon border.

Israel moves into Lebanon – and Iran responds

On the last day of the month, Israeli forces cross the border to conduct what they call “limited, localised, and targeted ground raids” against Hezbollah – despite calls from its allies to cease fire.

On 1 October, in an anticipated move, Iran launches nearly 200 missiles, according to Israel’s army radio, in retaliation for Israel’s campaign against Hezbollah.

In the hours that follow, Iran’s state TV claims 90% of the missiles hit their targets while an Israeli spokesman says officials are so far not aware of any injuries from the attack. A Palestinian worker in the West Bank is later confirmed dead after being hit by falling debris following Iran’s attack.

During the October 7 attacks and the ensuing war more than 1,200 Israelis have been killed and 97 hostages out of around 250 taken to Gaza remain there.

More than 41,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza and over 96,000 have been injured according to its health ministry. The IDF estimated in August that more than 17,000 of those killed were Hamas fighters.

More than 700 Palestinians have been killed in the West Bank and over 6,000 have been injured.

The Lebanese Health Ministry says nearly 2000 of its citizens have been killed, mostly since Israel stepped up attacks. The IDF says 250 Hezbollah fighters have been killed.

Up to 20 September, 28 Israelis had been killed by Hezbollah rocket attacks.

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Fresh sanctions on Russia seem futile – Putin is more belligerent than ever

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Fresh sanctions on Russia seem futile - Putin is more belligerent than ever

There is a sense of impotent futility to the latest sanctions imposed by the UK on Russia in the wake of the Dawn Sturgess public inquiry report released today.

And it’s not just the UK.

For all Europe’s handwringing, rhetoric and sanctions, Vladimir Putin remains unmoved.

This week, he was more belligerent than ever, warning that while Russia does not want a war, if Europe starts one, it’s more than ready.

Ukraine war latest: Putin says Donald Trump has an agenda

As we approach a fourth year of Russia’s war with Ukraine, the world is operating under new management and new rules, but the penny has not yet dropped in Europe.

The much-vaunted ‘rules-based world order’ is falling apart. America, so long its guardian, has deserted it and is now in league more and more with Russia.

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The role Putin played in Briton’s death

The Trump administration is more interested in the promise of renewed trading ties and business deals with Putin’s Russia, despite all its murderous faults.

Putin is winning on the battlefield, slowly but steadily, and Ukraine is running out of money. America has turned off the tap and is now acting as an arms dealer, selling Ukraine weapons via Europe.

Ukraine needs in excess of a hundred billion dollars a year to continue fighting. Europe is bickering over how to use frozen Russian assets to fund that.

And there is certainly no sign of European governments biting the bullet and asking taxpayers to do so instead.

Read more:
Briton detained in Ukraine
Putin ‘morally responsible’ for Salisbury novichok death

The alternative way of stopping Russia’s grinding advance is sending troops to Ukraine, which remains out of the question.

So for now, we have just words and sanctions instead.

Sir Keir Starmer may wring his hands about the “Kremlin’s disregard for innocent lives” in the wake of the inquiry into Dawn Sturgess’s death in Salisbury in 2018. It holds the Russian leader “morally responsible” for the Skripal poisoning.

But if Europe is not prepared to put its money where its rhetoric and sanctions are, does this add up to much more than posturing?

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Ukrainian troops react to Trump’s peace plan

European governments have for almost a year seemed in denial, acting like a cheated spouse. As America’s affections for Russia have become more and more obvious, Europe has hoped against hope to win back its partner.

The affair between Trump and Putin is now, it seems, in full sight.

America no longer wants to support either Europe or Ukraine, only to profit from arms sales to the conflict.

Tantalising deals dangled by Moscow are all it takes, it seems, to keep Donald Trump’s interest.

Substituting impotent sanctions and rhetoric for solid financial support for Ukraine at some point becomes worse than pointless.

It encourages Kyiv to carry on fighting, as Putin put it recently, “to the last Ukrainian” in the mistaken belief that Europe has its back.

The moment of reckoning approaches for Europe, but there is no sign of its leaders accepting that fact.

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Gaza longs for normality, but quasi-anarchy reigns and Hamas is once again exerting control

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Gaza longs for normality, but quasi-anarchy reigns and Hamas is once again exerting control

There is a desperate desire for normality in Gaza – for full shops, functioning hospitals, open schools, habitable homes and usable roads. For electricity that comes on reliably, skies that don’t hum with drones and days that don’t crackle with gunfire.

In Khan Younis, 54 couples got married at one enormous shared ceremony. The event attracted crowds who clambered on to a smashed-out building opposite the dais to wave at the brides and grooms, and to celebrate. Amid a grey landscape of dust and destruction, the image was one of colour and cheer.

It is a captivating vision of a better world, but it is an illusion. Gaza is still being ripped by tides of danger, violence and volatility. And it all sits within a cobweb of conflicting interests that makes security so precarious that you wonder how peace can ever return.

Take the past day or two. First, the Israeli military says that five of their soldiers have been injured after being attacked by Hamas fighters who may have emerged from hiding in tunnels.

Palestinians celebrate a mass wedding ceremony in Khan Younis, on 2 December: Pic: AP
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Palestinians celebrate a mass wedding ceremony in Khan Younis, on 2 December: Pic: AP

As has happened after all such incidents previously, Israel responds with a show of might – with an airstrike that, it says, was aimed at a senior Hamas official. In the ensuing fallout, civilians, including two children, are killed.

Israel also announces that it will open the Rafah Crossing, but only to allow people out of Gaza. Egypt says it won’t co-operate unless the crossing allows people to go in both directions. Israel, which suspects Egypt of offering financial support to Hamas, does not agree. Stalemate.

Also in Rafah, Yasser Abu Shabab, leader of a militant group that opposed Hamas and was getting covert backing from Israel, is killed, presumably by Hamas fighters. Exactly how they got into his territory is hard to guess, but his killing suggests that, far from being degraded, Hamas is once again exerting control.

Read more:
Anti-Hamas militia leader killed in Gaza Strip – reports
Rafah crossing to open ‘in coming days’, Israel says

And then there is the return of the remains of the penultimate hostage, Sudthisak Rinthalak, from Gaza to Israel. Only one body now remains to be handed back, that of police officer Ran Gvili, and once that has been returned, then we wonder what will happen next.

In theory, we enter Phase Two, which will see a flood of aid, the disarmament of Hamas, the rebuilding of Gaza and a new governance structure. But the obstacles ahead are monumental, ranging from questions about exactly who is going to take Hamas’s weapons away from them, to how Palestinians are going to feel about Gaza being governed by foreigners.

Hostage Ran Gvili, whose remains have yet to be returned. Pic: AP
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Hostage Ran Gvili, whose remains have yet to be returned. Pic: AP

Sources say that a huge amount of effort has been invested, largely by American diplomats, soldiers, planners and business people, in trying to plan for this future. America has a huge co-ordination centre set up in southern Israel and President Trump believes that peace in the Middle East is his ticket to the Nobel Prize.

But it would be a huge – strike that, impossible – stretch of faith to think that these plans will come into play effortlessly. They won’t. The ambitions outlined in Phase Two are still little more than hopes.

For one thing, half of Gaza is still under Israeli military control and the IDF are not going anywhere. For another, the other half of Gaza is in a state of quasi-anarchy.

The idea of a military supervisory force has been signed off by the United Nations, but has not yet been created. Nor has a set of rules of engagement – imagine if an Egyptian military unit comes across a firefight between Hamas and a different militia – who would they shoot at first? What rules would cover their actions? How do you maintain peace in Gaza?

The questions go on into the distance. And, as long as Hamas regroups, so the concept of it then choosing to voluntarily disarm and largely disband seems harder and harder to believe. If that doesn’t happen, then Israel will not stop worrying about another October 7 attack.

We could go on like this, but the point is clear. The return of the final hostage will bring into play a mass of new questions, none of which appear to have answers. And for the people of Gaza, the anxiety of life will roll on.

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Salisbury novichok poisonings: Putin ‘morally responsible’ for woman’s death after authorising botched spy assassination bid

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Salisbury novichok poisonings: Putin 'morally responsible' for woman's death after authorising botched spy assassination bid

The assassination attempt on a former Russian spy was authorised by Vladimir Putin, who is “morally responsible” for the death of a woman poisoned by the nerve agent used in the attack, a public inquiry has found.

The chairman, Lord Hughes, found there were “failings” in the management of Sergei Skripal, 74, who was a member of Russian military intelligence, the GRU, before coming to the UK in 2010 on a prisoner exchange after being convicted of spying for Britain.

But he found the assessment that he wasn’t at “significant risk” of assassination was not “unreasonable” at the time of the attack in Salisbury on 4 March 2018, which could only have been avoided by hiding him with a completely new identity.

Mr Skripal and his daughter Yulia, 41, who was also poisoned, were left seriously ill, along with then police officer Nick Bailey, who was sent to search their home, but they all survived.

Sergei Skripal and Yulia Skripal.
Pic: Shutterstock
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Sergei Skripal and Yulia Skripal.
Pic: Shutterstock


Dawn Sturgess, 44, died on 8 July, just over a week after unwittingly spraying herself with novichok given to her by her partner, Charlie Rowley, 52, in a perfume bottle in nearby Amesbury on 30 June 2018. Mr Rowley was left seriously ill but survived.

In his 174-page report, following last year’s seven-week inquiry, costing more than £8m, former Supreme Court judge Lord Hughes said she received “entirely appropriate” medical care but her condition was “unsurvivable” from a very early stage.

The inquiry found GRU officers using the aliases Alexander Petrov, 46, and Ruslan Boshirov, 47, had brought the Nina Ricci bottle containing the novichok to Salisbury after arriving in London from Moscow with a third agent known as Sergey Fedotov to kill Mr Skripal on 2 March.

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L-R Suspects who used the names of Sergey Fedotov, Ruslan Boshirov and Alexander Petrov. Pics: UK Counter Terrorism Policing
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L-R Suspects who used the names of Sergey Fedotov, Ruslan Boshirov and Alexander Petrov. Pics: UK Counter Terrorism Policing

The report said it was likely the same bottle Petrov and Boshirov used to apply the military-grade nerve agent to the handle of Mr Skripal’s front door before it was “recklessly discarded”.

“They can have had no regard to the hazard thus created, of the death of, or serious injury to, an uncountable number of innocent people,” it said.

It is “impossible to say” where Mr Rowley found the bottle, but was likely within a few days of it being abandoned on 4 March, meaning there is “clear causative link” with the death of mother-of-three Ms Sturgess.

Novichok was in perfume bottle. Pic: Reuters
Image:
Novichok was in perfume bottle. Pic: Reuters

Lord Hughes said he was sure the three GRU agents “were acting on instructions”, adding: “I have concluded that the operation to assassinate Sergei Skripal must have been authorised at the highest level, by President Putin.

“I therefore conclude that those involved in the assassination attempt (not only Petrov, Boshirov and Fedotov, but also those who sent them, and anyone else giving authorisation or knowing assistance in Russia or elsewhere) were morally responsible for Dawn Sturgess’s death,” he said.

Russian ambassador summonsed

After the publication of the report, the government announced the GRU has been sanctioned in its entirety, and the Russian Ambassador has been summonsed to the Foreign Office to answer for Russia’s ongoing campaign of alleged hostile activity against the UK.

Sir Keir Starmer said the findings “are a grave reminder of the Kremlin’s disregard for innocent lives” and that Ms Sturgess’s “needless” death was a tragedy that “will forever be a reminder of Russia’s reckless aggression”.

“The UK will always stand up to Putin’s brutal regime and call out his murderous machine for what it is,” the prime minister said.

He said deploying the “highly toxic nerve agent in a busy city centre was an astonishingly reckless act” with an “entirely foreseeable” risk that others beyond the intended target would be killed or injured.

The inquiry heard a total of 87 people presented at A&E.

Pic AP
Image:
Pic AP

Lord Hughes said there was a decision taken not to issue advice to the public not to pick anything up which they hadn’t dropped, which was a “reasonable conclusion” at the time, so as not to cause “widespread panic”.

He also said there had been no need for training beyond specialist medics before the “completely unexpected use of a nerve agent in an English city”.

After the initial attack, wider training was “appropriate” and was given but should have been more widely circulated.

In a statement following the publication of his report, Lord Hughes said Ms Sturgess’s death was “needless and arbitrary”, while the circumstances are “clear but quite extraordinary”.

“She was the entirely innocent victim of the cruel and cynical acts of others,” he said.

'We can finally put her to peace' . Pic: Met Police/PA
Image:
‘We can finally put her to peace’ . Pic: Met Police/PA

‘We can have Dawn back now’

Speaking after the report was published, Ms Sturgess’s father, Stanley Sturgess, said: “We can have Dawn back now. She’s been public for seven years. We can finally put her to peace.”

In a statement, her family said they felt “vindicated” by the report, which recognised how Wiltshire police wrongly characterised Ms Sturgess as a drug user.

But they said: “Today’s report has left us with some answers, but also a number of unanswered questions.

“We have always wanted to ensure that what happened to Dawn will not happen to others; that lessons should be learned and that meaningful changes should be made.

“The report contains no recommendations. That is a matter of real concern. There should, there must, be reflection and real change.”

Wiltshire Police Chief Constable Catherine Roper admitted the pain of Ms Sturgess’s family was “compounded by mistakes made” by the force, adding: “For this, I am truly sorry.”

Russia has denied involvement

The Russian Embassy has firmly denied any connection between Russia and the attack on the Skripals.

But the chairman dismissed Russia’s explanation that the Salisbury and Amesbury poisonings were the result of a scheme devised by the UK authorities to blame Russia, and the claims of Petrov and Borisov in a television interview that they were sightseeing.

The inquiry chairman said the evidence of a Russian state attack was “overwhelming” and was designed not only as a revenge attack against Mr Skripal, but amounted to a “public statement” that Russia “will act decisively in its own interests”.

Lord Hughes found “some features of the management” of Mr Skripal “could and should have been improved”, including insufficient regular written risk assessments.

But although there was “inevitably” some risk of harm at Russia’s hands, the analysis that it was not likely was “reasonable”, he said.

“There is no sufficient basis for concluding that there ought to have been assessed to be an enhanced risk to him of lethal attack on British soil, such as to call for security measures,” such as living under a new identity or at a secret address, the chairman said.

He added that CCTV cameras, alarms or hidden bugs inside Mr Skripal’s house might have been possible but wouldn’t have prevented the “professionally mounted attack with a nerve agent”.

Sky News has approached the Russian Embassy for comment on the report.

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