I can understand that this might well be fairly unpalatible to those who lost family in the attack.
Fury
as BBC documentary suggests Government plotted 7/7 attacks to boost
Iraq war support
(well,
it is hosted by an Irish comedian).
1
October, 2012
- The BBC3 documentary shows conspiracy theorists - including model Layla Randle-Conde - play the bombers
- Producers blow up a bus in a bid to recreate the explosion in Tavistock Square that killed 13 people
- Parents of victims brand programme 'disgusting' and in 'really bad taste
Families
of victims of the 7/7 London bombings have slammed the BBC for a
'disgusting' documentary that investigates conspiracy theories
surrounding the atrocity.
The
programme, to be aired on BBC3 and hosted by Irish comedian Andrew
Maxwell, probes claims that the co-ordinated blasts were in fact
part of a Government plot to boost support for the Iraq war.
The
attacks killed 52 people when four suicide bombers detonated their
home made devices on Tubes and a bus during the morning rush-hour
commute.
'Disgusting':
Programme makers even blow up a London bus in the documentary that
explores the theory that the 7/7 bombings were in fact a government
plot to garner support for the 'war on terror'
In
tonight's documentary show producers blow up a double-decker
London bus in a bid to recreate the explosion in Tavistock Square
that killed 13 people.
It
also features conspiracy theorists - including model Layla
Randle-Conde - playing the parts of the bombers in a reconstruction
of events.
June
Taylor, whose daughter Carrie, 24, died in the underground blast near
Aldgate Station told The
Sun: 'The
BBC can’t get any lower than this. They should have spoken to the
families.'
Branding
the programme 'disgusting', she added: 'They are trivialising the
tragedy. People don’t want to be back in that dark place. It puts
us through the pain all over again.'
Unimaginable:
13 people were killed when a bomb detonated on board the Number 30
bus in Tavistock Square
Kim
Beer, 54, of Borehamwood, Herts, who lost her son Philip, 22, in the
Tube blast near King’s Cross said it was in 'really bad taste',
adding: 'How do they think we live with this?'
A
BBC spokeswoman said of 7/7 Bombings: Conspiracy Road Trip: 'The
series takes conspiracy theorists on a journey to fully explore the
facts and challenge their beliefs.'
Between
8.50am and 9.47am on July 7 2005, four British Muslims - Mohammad
Sidique Khan, 30, Shehzad Tanweer, 22, Jermaine Lindsay, 19, and
Hasib Hussain, 18 - blew themselves up using home-made explosives,
killing 56 (including themselves) and injuring 700 on three Tube
trains and a double-decker bus.
Angry:
June Taylor (left, with husband john), whose daughter Carrie, 24,
died in the blast near Aldgate Station branded the show 'disgusting'.
It is hosted by Irish comedian Andrew Maxwell (right)
They
had travelled on a mainline train from Luton into King's Cross
Thameslink Station in London, each carrying a heavy rucksack of
explosives.
It
is a timeline that has been endorsed by a high-level Parliamentary
inquiry and a government report, both published in May 2006 ten
months after the event, based on 12,500 statements, a police
examination of 142 computers and 6,000 hours of CCTV footage.
The
report insisted that the bombers carried out the attacks on their
own, constructing explosives from chapatti flour and hair bleach
mixed in the bath at a flat in Leeds, Yorkshire, where all four had
family and friends.
However
there have since been a wave of conspiracy theories around the
attacks.
One
of the more popular accuses then Prime Minister Tony Blair, the
Government, the police, and the British and Israeli Secret Services
of murdering the innocent people to stir up anti-Islamic fervour and
create public support for the 'war on terror' and looming war in
Iraq.
Suicide
bombers: Four British Muslims - Mohammad Sidique Khan, 30, Shehzad
Tanweer, 22, Jermaine Lindsay, 19, and Hasib Hussain, 18 - used
home-made explosives to carry out the attacks
It
also alleges that the four British Muslims were tricked by the
authorities into taking part in what they were told would be a mock
anti-terror training exercise.
What
they weren't told, it is claimed, was that the Government was going
to blow them up, along with other passengers, then pretend the four
were suicide bombers.
Theorists
have also accused government agents of setting off pre-planted
explosives under the three Tube trains and on the bus.
The
aftermath: Theorists have also accused government agents of setting
off pre-planted explosives under the three Tube trains and on the bus
They
suggest that the four Muslims were not, in fact, on any of the Tube
trains, claiming that they missed them altogether because of the
train delays on the Luton to London line.
Some
even believe that because the four did not get onto the Tube on time,
three of them were murdered by police at Canary Wharf later that
morning and the fourth - the bus bomber - ran off.
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