Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Two more years for Sia Lagos as CEO and Principal Registrar of the FCA ... More >>

Politics Media Law Society


Appeasement ... Craven backdowns galore … Creative Australia – how to avoid “divisive debates” … Grovels and concealments follow the “Undercover Jew” fiasco … Suppression orders protecting Lattouf terminators … No waves at the Yarts Ministry … Preselection jeopardy for pro-Palestinian pollie … Justice Lee dabbles in “sentient citizenship” … Semites and antisemitism ... Read on ... 

Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

Rome is burning ... Giorgia Meloni's right-wing populist regime threatens judicial independence ... Moves to strip constitutional independence of La Magistratura ... Judges on the ramparts ... The Osama Almasri affair ... Silvana Olivetti reports ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


Fresh blood appointed to the Federal Court and the FCFC (Divs 1 & 2) 

Justinian's Bloggers

London Calling ... Law n Order in Blighty ... King invites the King for State visit ... Grovels aplenty ... Magistrate over does the "send him down" ... Musos strike an angry chord about AI encroachment ... Law shops protect the billable hour ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt files ... Read more >> 

"Creative Australia is an advocate for freedom of artistic expression and is not an adjudicator on the interpretation of art. However, the Board believes a prolonged and divisive debate about the 2026 selection outcome poses an unacceptable risk to public support for Australia's artistic community and could undermine our goal of bringing Australians together through art and creativity."

Statement from Creative Australia following its decision to cancel Khaled Sabsabi and curator Michael Dagostino as the creative team to represent Australia at the Venice Biennale 2026, February 13, 2025 ... Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

Damien Carrick ... For 23 years Carrick has presented the Law Report on ABC Radio National ... An insight into the man behind the microphone ... Law and media ... Pursuit of the story ... Pressing topics ... Informative guests ... On The Couch ... Read more >> 


Justinian's archive

Pat's wobbly evidence in defamation case ... Remembering the great Pat O'Shane's defamation case against culture warrior Janet (The Planet) Albrechtsen ... Pat comes home at the trial and most of the damages on appeal ... When Fairfax defended Albrechtsen ... From Justinian's Archive, April 15, 2004 ... Read more >>


 

 

« Justice Judith Kelly | Main | Sister Susan Connelly »
Friday
Aug282020

The Salisbury Poisonings

Novichok comes to England ... The story of Putin's hit men trying to take out a former double agent ... A dab on the door handle ... Lockdown and fear as police and health experts struggle to contain this most deadly of nerve agents ... Alexi Navalny the latest victim of state ordered poisoning ... Miss Lumière files from well behind the front line  

Yulia & Sergei Skripal: cheers 

Watching the BBC's four part series about the extraordinary events of March 2018 in Salisbury, the non-descript English town of 46,000 pasty souls, is terrifyingly prescient in a rear vision sort of way. 

At the time, what unfolded seemed as gothic as the town's famous cathedral.

Two years later, the brazen nerve agent attack on former Soviet spy (and British double agent) Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia and its attendant tropes of outrageous contagion (full body suits, masks, sprays, contact tracing) seem chillingly familiar, courtesy of Covid.

As well, there's the diabolical timing of Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny's similar fate just last week.

As we watch from the claustrophobic discomfort of our locked down living rooms, Navalny is fighting for his life in a German hospital room - another victim of Vladimir Putin's dark ambition. 

The toxin within the poisoned chalice (in this case a plastic cuppa from an airport café) appears to be contained within Navalny's comatose body.

Not so the Novichok cunningly administered to the Skripals via their suburban front door knob. 

As The Salisbury Poisonings spells out early on, it is one of the most contagious and lethal substances known on earth. 

How it was tracked down, isolated and contained - and then reappeared several months later in nearby Amesbury to deadly effect - is the subject of this meticulously researched, tautly written and quietly moving mini-series.

It's the BBC, so it's no surprise that plenty of effort went into getting the facts, via witness statements and contemporaneous documentation.

The writers (Panorama journalists Adam Patterson and Declan Lawn) have created an atmosphere of restrained hysteria, fear and disbelief, punctuated by the personal stories of several collateral victims.

These include one of the first police officers on the scene, DS Nick Bailey (another convincing turn by the underrated Rafe Spall) and poor, desperate Dawn Sturgess (MyAnna Buring) who died after dabbing what she thought was an upmarket scent on her wrists. It was, tragically, the discarded Novichok bottle.

The series focuses on the dogged director of public health for Wiltshire, Tracy Daszkiewicz (portrayed by an increasingly riven Anne-Marie Duff) who is charged with managing the unfolding disaster of an international incident.

The British government, then led by Theresa May, wasted no time in fingering the Soviets (Novichok was developed by the Russian military in the 70s) and promptly expelled a number of diplomats.

However, the drama here is more local, and all the more powerful for it.

Looking for Novichok in Salisbury

The writing and performances are grittily natural and believable, with a tension so palpable Miss Lumière several times thought she might be watching the real thing (albeit moodily lit and beautifully edited).

The final episode has an appropriately elegiac mood, two years on from the worst public health crisis Britain has ever (miraculously) averted. 

Director Saul Dibb has eerily evoked both the present and the past in The Salisbury Poisonings, which may make it the perfect armchair antidote to life in 2020. Or not.

The Salisbury Poisonings is streaming on SBS On Demand

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Editor Permission Required
You must have editing permission for this entry in order to post comments.