Request sent to artist following concerns that unsightly blockades will put off visitors

This article is more than 2 years old

This article is more than 2 years old

The street artist Banksy is being encouraged by council officials to make one of his cloak-and-dagger visits to Salisbury to cheer up the barriers being set up around sites contaminated in the nerve agent attack.

Unsightly blockades are being set up in the city as the lengthy process of cleaning nine sites connected to the attempted murder of Sergei Skripal and his daughter, Yulia, gets under way.

There is concern in Salisbury that images of the barriers being beamed around the world will put off visitors and some residents have asked if they can be made more colourful or be decorated with pictures.

Alistair Cunningham, chair of the recovery coordination group, said messages of welcome and signs giving directions would be put on them.

But he added: “We were joking about whether a Banksy would appear on one of them and in due course become an attraction - so I put that message out there.”

The task of Banksy secretly creating a mural on a Salisbury barrier would be a challenge even to his ingenuity. Eighty police officers are in place guarding the cordons every day and the sites are watched intently by reporters, photographers, camera crews and residents.

But Salisbury is only 50 miles from Banksy’s home patch of Bristol and the nature of the attack could be a good subject for him. One of his most famous West Country murals of recent times is the so-called “Spy Booth” near the UK intelligence agency GCHQ in Cheltenham, which shows three spooks in raincoats apparently bugging a phone box.

The Guardian made Banksy’s people aware of Cunningham’s lighthearted suggestion and a spokesperson said the message would be passed on.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Banksy’s ‘Spy Booth’ mural in Cheltenham, near the headquarters of the UK intelligence service GCHQ. Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA

Whether or not a Banksy does appear, Wiltshire council will work with arts groups in Salisbury to try to find a way of brightening the barriers.



On Friday the government insisted Salisbury was safe after one of its leading scientists had said residue of the nerve agent used in the attack on the Skripals could still be as potent as it was when it was deployed more than six weeks ago.



Experts involved in the decontamination effort revealed there could still be “hotspots” yet to be discovered where the novichok agent remained in high concentrations.

Officials from the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said military personnel in protective suits would be back in the city soon to begin the lengthy decontamination process.

The revelations caused some alarm and prompted Defra to issue a statement spelling out that it believed there was no danger to the public.

A Defra spokesperson said: “As Public Health England has stated, Salisbury is safe for residents and visitors. All work undertaken on each site will take appropriate measures to ensure that there is no additional risk to the public.

“There is no need to take any additional precautions. Cordons are in place to protect the public from any potential risk.”



