As
we approach the London Olympics with all the warnings of possible
terrorist attacks and false flag operations, it may be timely to look
at the 7/7 London bombings
The
7/7 London Bombings: Documents Prove that the Official Story Cannot
be True
by
Tom Secker
3
July, 2012
The
7/7 paper trail has led me in many different
directions. From the results of J7 FOIA
requests to court documents from PACER to
the vast range of materials made available at the inquests into
the 52 deaths, I have tried to see that no document goes unread.
There are many pieces of paper that show that contradict the
official story, but only some that categorically prove it is
untrue.
The
official story comprises three reports:
2) The
1st Intelligence and Security Committee report,
released in tandem with the narrative account
3) The
2nd Intelligence and Security Committee report,
released three years later in May 2009, in particular its
narrative timeline of
events
The
following 7 documents show that key claims of the official story
presented in these three reports simply cannot be true.
Collectively and cumulatively they show that the overall
official story likewise simply cannot be true.
Document
1: The Home Office Amendment to the narrative account
In
the original Home Office narrative it claims that the alleged
bombers got on the 7:40 train from Luton station to Kings'
Cross Thameslink station in London. At that point, it had
already been established that the 7:40 train did not run that day,
leading to considerable
criticism of
the Home Office. In August 2007, over two years after the
bombings and over a year after this fundamental untruth had been
pointed out to the authorities, they published an amendment to the
official narrative. It changed two
paragraphs in
the original narrative.
The
links to both the Home Office webpage and
the pdf
file now
come up as not found. Because a new version of the narrative
has not been published, we are presented with an Orwellian
paradox. If anyone looks for the official story today,
they will find the original narrative with the incorrect train
time. Even if they know about the time being wrong, they
might never find the amendment that proves beyond any doubt that
the official story in the Home Office report is incorrect.
You
can download the narrative amendment here,
(onsite backup here) though
despite being a single page it comes in at a whopping 2.45 MB.
This can only be part of a deliberate attempt to discourage people
from finding it and sharing it. There's literally no other
explanation for why you would make a single page text-only PDF
have such a large filesize. By comparison, the Home
Office narrative PDF
file, which is 60 pages and includes graphics, is only 584KB.
Document
2: Sidique Khan's resignation letter
Towards the
end of 2004, supposed 7/7 ringleader Mohammed Sidique Khan
resigned from his job as a teaching assistant at Hillside Primary
School in Leeds. He then travelled to Pakistan for around
three months, returning in February 2005. The Home Office
narrative refers to 'Khan and Tanweers visit to Pakistan from 19
November 2004 to 8 February 2005'. The ISC's first report
says, 'Siddeque Khan travelled to Pakistan in 2003 and spent time
there with Shazad Tanweer from November 2004 to February 2005'.
Their second report does not give any dates at all.
So, the Home
Office claim that Khan left for Pakistan on November 19th 2004,
and note:
(...)his increasingly poor attendance record. This culminated in a period of sick leave from 20 September to 19 November 2004. The school administration had reason to believe that the absences were not genuine and dismissed him. At the same time, he had in any case, written tosay he would not be returning to work.
There
is a problem here - there is no evidence to support the idea that
Khan went to Pakistan as early as November 19th 2004, or that he
was dismissed. A response to
a J7 FOIA request lists his absences from work including '20
September 2004 - 30 November 2004 Sick Leave' and '1 December 2004
- 7 December 2004 Unauthorised absence resulting in Mr Khan
handing in his resignation on 7 December 2004.'
If he handed
in his resignation in Leeds on December 7th then he couldn't have
been in Pakistan since November 19th. Even if he had posted the
letter before leaving, or left it with someone else for them to
hand in, that does not explain why the school did not receive it
until nearly three weeks later.
The
letter itself has several sections redacted, including where the
date would likely be. The attached 'leaver's form' lists
numerous possible reasons including dismissal for a contract
worker, which would be appropriate if Khan had been sacked.
Instead, the box that is ticked is 'Resig, Family Commit'.
There are other questions around Khan's work for Hillside Primary
School that are detailed here,
and you can download his full personnel record here (PDF,
71.9MB).
However, the
letter itself provides other significant details.
You
can download the letter and attached form here (PDF,
3.96MB). It is clear that this letter was written before
Khan departed for Pakistan, but also that he intended to return
from whatever he was doing there. The notion that he
was going there to fight, either in Kashmir in the Afghan border
region, is not substantiated at all. This whole story about
Khan and Tanweer travelling to training camps with the aim of
fighting in the jihad, but then changing their minds and coming
back to Britain to carry out suicide attacks appears to be total
speculation. Even the basic facts of the story, the whens
and wheres, as presented by the Home Office and ISC, are wrong.
Document
3: MI5 Subscriber check on Sidique Khan's mobile phone
The question
of how much MI5 knew about the alleged bombers, and Sidique Khan
in particular, and when they knew it has been an issue of some
dispute and discussion. According to the original ISC
report:
In the comprehensive review of intelligence records that it conducted, the Security Service found that it had on record a telephone number which it was only possible to identify after the attacks as belonging to Jermaine Lindsay. They also had on record a telephone number registered to a Siddeque Khan and details of contacts between that number and an individual who had been under Security Service investigation in 2003. A review of related surveillance data showed that Siddeque Khan and Shazad Tanweer had been among a group of men who had held meetings with others under Security Service investigation in 2004.
That was in
2006. Over time, more and more details became available.
We know know that there the individual who was under investigation
in 2003 was Mohammed Qayyum Khan, known as 'Q'. He was
apparently an Al Qaeda facilitator in the UK and the mastermind of
the 'Fertiliser bomb plot' based around Omar Khyam. During
the course of the Operation Crevice investigation into Khyam, Q
and others the security services came across Sidique Khan on
several occasions, in several different ways.
The initial
connection was said to be via phone calls to Q. The second
ISC report says:
13 July 2003 Data from a mobile phone associated with Mohammed Qayum KHAN shows a number of calls with a telephone number MI5 had not seen before. Checks reveal that the telephone number in question is registered to "Siddique KHAN" of 49a Bude Road, Leeds (the address of a bookshop selling extremist literature). MI5 cannot match the name "Siddique KHAN" with any in their databases, and the contact is not investigated further since there is nothing to suggest involvement in any terrorist-related activity.
The
report goes on to detail further calls between these phones in
July and August 2003. The problem is that the MI5 subscriber
check on a mobile that turned up Sidique Khan as the registered
user was carried out in March 2003. This is not only earlier
in the year, but before Crevice had even started, if we go by the
timeline presented by the ISC. Though discussions
at the inquestslargely
muddied the waters instead of clearing them, it has become
abundantly clear that MI5 knew a lot more than they have ever
admitted. Once again, the basic question of what happened
and when is simply not a true account.
You
can download the MI5 document detailing the subscriber
check here (PDF,
100KB). For a larger discussion of Operation Crevice, which
appears to have been a sophisticated entrapment operation, see the
Mohammed Junaid Babar document
collection.
Document
4: Email exchange between MI5 and West Yorkshire Police
Aside from
the phone calls between a phone registered to Sidique Khan and Q
(who was probably working for MI5), the other major connection
between Khan and the Crevice suspects was through surveillance of
Omar Khyam. Khyam and Khan met on several occasions, and MI5
and Special Branch surveillance teams followed Khan, sometimes
over 200 miles up the M1 to Leeds. They took photographs of
the occupants of the car, registration numbers, and noted
addresses where they stopped.
On February
2nd 2004 they followed Khan around as he met with Omar Khyam and
others in Crawley, near London. They then watched and
followed the car North, all the way to Leeds, where they saw it
drop off some of its occupants before finally stopping outside 10
Thornhill Park Avenue. This was the home address of Sidique
Khan's wife Hasina Patel, though whether Khan was living
there at the time is not certain. Nonetheless, Khan parked
and went inside the house on the evening of February 2nd 2004, and
MI5 watched him do it.
That much is
not disputed, though of course it was not mentioned in the first
ISC report. The second one explains that:
16 February 2004 MI5 runs checks on the green Honda Civic (seen on 2 February), which is shown to be registered to a Hasina PATEL at 10 Thornhill Park Avenue, Dewsbury. MI5 ask West Yorkshire Police for any details they have on Hasina PATEL in order to enable us to fully identify any potential associates of KHYAM. There is no record of a written response to this request.
This
claim, that West Yorkshire Police (WYP) simply didn't bother
to respond to this request for information, is one of several
attempts in Crevice and other related operations to put the blame
on WYP for the 'intelligence failures'. Much the same thing
also happened with the story aroundMartin
McDaid,
another probable security services agent who knew Sidique Khan.
However, this was not the only story that MI5 told the ISC.
In another section of the second ISC report it says:
MI5 asked West Yorkshire Police to check the name "Hasina PATEL" and the address (10 Thornhill Park Avenue, Dewsbury) against their databases in order "to enable us to fully identify any potential associates of KHYAM". Nothing significant was found and, with no evidence to justify further action, none was taken.
So is there
'no record of a written response' or was there a response but
'nothing significant was found'? But wait, just to make it
even less clear, the ISC also reported that:
After the meeting on 2 February 2004, level 1 checks were carried out which showed that the car was registered to a Hasina PATEL at 10 Thornhill Park Avenue, Dewsbury. MI5 then asked West Yorkshire Police for any details they had on a Hasina PATEL in order to enable us to fully identify any potential associates of KHYAM. No information was discovered.
That makes
it three different stories that MI5 told the ISC just about
whether or not they got a response from WYP about Hasina Patel and
if they did, what the response said. One story is that there
was no response; the second that the response contained 'nothing
significant'; the third that the response contained 'no
information'. So which is it? As you might have
expected, WYP did respond, with information about Hasina Patel and
the house at 10 Thornhill Park Avenue.
Whether
you consider this information significant or insignificant, yet
again what is clear is that the official story told by the ISC is
not true. Indeed, two versions of what MI5 told the ISC, and
the ISC told us, are not true. MI5 claimed there was no
response, but there was. They said no information was
discovered, but some was. The only point on which they might
be telling the truth is whether or not the information discovered
was significant. That is difficult to judge since so much of
the information is redacted. You can download the email
exchange between MI5 and WYP about Hasina Patel here (PDF
55KB).
Document
5: Forensic links between the alleged bombers and the 'bomb
factory'
The
physical, forensic science case against the alleged bombers is
just as shoddy as that presented by the Home Office, the ISC and
MI5. One of the major problems is that the police
investigating the crime appear to have simply assumed the guilt of
the four men, despite a distinct of forensic evidence at the most
critical points in the story. A full examination will have
to be reserved for later but one particularly important aspect is
the alleged bomb factory in Alexandra Grove, Leeds.
This is
where Khan, Tanweer, Hussain and Lindsay are supposed to have
cooked up their homemade peroxide and black pepper explosives.
All the official reports are unanimous on this point, even though
they aren't even certain that the explosions were caused by
peroxide-based explosives. Go figure.
At the
inquests into the deaths of the 52 the Metropolitan Police Service
entered into evidence displays of the 'items of note' found in the
alleged bomb factory that were linked to the alleged bombers by
handwriting, fingerprints or DNA. They found all sorts of
items, from saucepans to extension cables to scissors to
lightbulbs to kitchen foil.
So what's
the problem? The problem is that all these mundane items
could be connected to the alleged bombers, but the most critical
items could not.
These
plastic tubs supposedly contained the explosive mixture used in
the 7/7 bombings, though only one type of sludge actually had
explosive properties when tested. None of these tubs, out of
dozens, were linked to any of the alleged bombers by DNA or
fingerprints. The sludge was not poisonous or particularly
corrosive, so there is no reason for them to have always worn
gloves when handling it. Without this critical bit of
evidence, which should exist if the official story is true, it is
impossible to see how those four men used those tubs of
sludge to bomb London on 7/7.
The
original exhibits were hi-res images but for the sake of
convenience and for those with low bandwidth I have put together
both a lower quality and a high quality file containing all four
exhibits, one for each of the alleged bombers. You can
download the higher quality version here(PDF,
8.09MB) and the lower quality version here (PDF
1.64MB).
Document
6: Metropolitan Police diagram of explosion on Liverpool
St train
Returning to
the Home Office narrative, it says:
Forensic evidence suggests that Tanweer was sitting towards the back of the second carriage with the rucksack next to him on the floor. The blast killed 8 people, including Tanweer, with 171 injured.
The MPS
produced diagrams for the inquests showing the carriages
where the alleged bombers are supposed to have been, and the
locations of victims and survivors. Fundamentally, these
diagrams do not first the Home Office descriptions of
events. The Liverpool Street train is perhaps the
clearest example.
The alleged
bomber, Shezad Tanweer, is shown in purple as person number 5.
As you can see, he is stood up in a standing area, not seated.
The person sat where one witness vaguely placed Tanweer is
number 3, William Walsh, who suffered minor injuries when he broke
through the window behind him to escape the carriage after the
blast. How did William Walsh, and for that matter Greg
Shannon (number 8), survive, while people further away and
shielded by other people such as Carrie Taylor (number 17) were
killed?
Perhaps even
more perplexing, the Home Office says that 171 people were injured
in the explosion. The full version of the diagram shows that
there were 43 people in this carriage, including Tanweer (if he
was actually there). If the blast killed 8 of them, that
leaves 35 injuries in the bombed carriage. That leaves
another 136 injuries on the rest of the train, which is the
equivalent of about another 3 whole carriage loads of people at
the same rate of occupancy. How were that many people
injured by one small backpack bomb?
Fundamentally,
this diagram does not show a realistic scenario, and contradicts
the Home Office version. You can download a full
hi-resolution copy of this diagram here (PDF,
3.34MB).
Document
7: Extract from Sidique Khan's Last Will and Final Testament
The
narrative says that among the 'key evidence indicating that these
were co-ordinated suicide attacks by these 4 men' is a page of
Sidique Khan's will. It says:
There is a video statement by Khan, shown on the al Jazeera television network on 1 September, and, separately, a last Will and Testament indicating his intention to martyr himself through a terrorist attack.
The video
statement is of unknown provenance, and makes no clear references
to suicide bombings or martyrdom or terrorist attacks. The
will is not available in full, and despite the Home Office citing
it as key evidence, and numerous mainstream media reports on it,
it was denied to us for many years with a variety of excuses.
Perhaps the most ridiculous among these is the idea that it would
be an invasion of Khan's privacy. In this way, the state
could continue to accuse Khan of being responsible without
releasing the evidence they cited in support of that
conclusion.
The claim
that he indicated his intent to martyr himself in his will is
based on the inclusion of a single word, 'shaheed'. This can
be used by Muslims to refer to martyrdom, but it can also mean to
die as a good Muslim, and hence be accepted in paradise without
having done anything as dramatic as becoming a suicide bomber.
In context, it is clear that Khan was not referring to killing
himself:
This
passage is addressed by Khan to his daughter, refers to changing
her nappy and being the first to feed her ice cream and get her
eid presents. The notion that this is somehow a confession
of suicidal and murderous intent is ridiculous, though curiously
this document has never appeared in the mainstream media, even
though it is now partially available. You can download it
for yourself here (PDF,
125KB).
Together,
these seven documents are the smoking guns that prove that the
official 7/7 story cannot be true. From the account of
Khan's motives, to the facts of how and why he left his job to
travel to Pakistan, to what connects the alleged bombers to the
alleged bomb factory, to how and where the explosions took place,
to what MI5 knew and when, the state has not told the truth at
every turn. Every fundamental part of the official 7/7 story
is contradicted by the very source material that should have been
used to put that official story together.
As we
approach the 7th anniversary of these attacks we must use the
evidence at our disposal to show just how fundamentally and how
broadly the state has lied about the bombings. While these
documents do not prove government complicity in the attacks, they
make the question of their involvement ever more important.
We have the evidence now to show how the cover-up and the lies are
not just the lazy, partial response of a system trying to hush up
talk of incompetence, but are the response of systemic
culture of deceit within the state. At its heart, the terror
we must confront is the fact that if those four men did not carry
out the attacks then the real culprits are still out there.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.