A Russian scientist was mowed down by a car near his house days after he claimed to have helped develop the nerve agent that almost killed the Skripals.

Vladimir Uglev was rushed to hospital in his hometown of Anapa on the Black Sea after he was struck while walking over a pedestrian crossing on Tuesday.

He suffered bruises to his head, right arm, and right leg and was in a stable condition while doctors awaited the results of head scans.

Russian scientist Vladimir Uglev, 71, was mowed down by a car near his house days after he claimed to have helped develop the nerve agent that almost killed the Skripals

The 71-year-old less than a week ago said he was certain Russia was behind the attempted murder of Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia (pictured)

Mr Uglev told The Bell he noticed the car wasn't slowing down and started running across the road and almost made it when the car hit him.

He jumped on to the bonnet as he was hit to avoid going under the wheels and slammed his head into the windscreen, breaking it.

The 71-year-old said less than a week ago that he was certain Russia was behind the attempted murder of Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia.

Mr Skripal, a former GRU spy, spent weeks in intensive care and has yet to speak publicly after the poison was sprayed on his doorknob in Salisbury.

Mr Uglev suffered bruises to his head, right arm, and right leg and was in a stable condition while doctors awaited the results of head scans.

The former scientist Uglev said he helped create nerve agent A-234 at a secretive Soviet laboratory (pictured in 1987) in Shikhany, near Saratov

Vladimir Uglev was rushed to hospital in his hometown of Anapa on the Black Sea after he was struck

However, he said Britain would never be able to prove it was Russia's doing unless it found the container the poison was administered from.

The former scientist Uglev said he helped create nerve agent A-234, which was used to poison the father and daughter on March 4.

'I can tell by the mass spectrometry readings, the presence of fluorine, by its molecular weight, and from all the spectrum data I was sent recently.' he told the BBC.

He said the Skripals only survived because they received a 'small dose, close to threshold level' in the botched assassination.

Mr Uglev said he worked at a secretive Soviet laboratory in Shikhany, near Saratov, producing Novichok nerve agents that would still be active today.

The aim of the 'newcomer' program was to create poisons 10 times more deadly than VX, which the scientists succeeded in doing.

He said the Skripals only survived because they received a 'small dose, close to threshold level' in the botched assassination

Soldiers in breathing apparatus replacing the paving where Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter collapsed after their nerve agent attack

Mr Uglev said about 200lbs of A-234 and similar nerve agents were produced and never entered mass production

'Judging by how pure their test sample proved to be, this may well have been from a batch made by my own hands. It has a long shelf life, and virtually no expiry date,' he said.

Mr Uglev said about 200lbs of A-234 and similar nerve agents were produced and never entered mass production.

However, it was enough to kill hundreds of thousands of people and his conscience was weighed by at least a dozen he believed were murdered using it.

The scientist was a victim himself, as he was splashed with a similar agent, A-240, in the lab when a container boiled over.

'I put my hand into hydrochloric acid, then washed it with an alkaline peroxide solution and put it under the tap. You could say the Skripals and I are baptised by the same Novichok,' he said.