A repost. Never was this more relevant than after the publication of the Chilcott Report
In retrospect: the death of Dr David Kelly in 2003
Recently
I heard Guy McPherson and Mike Silwa joking between themselves and
wondering aloud if they had much more to say on their radio show that
hadn’t been said before.
I
must say I have been feeling the same increasingly as I struggle to
keep up with the daily headlines which testify to things
deteriorating at breakneck pace on every front.
I
have been wondering if people out there are feeling the same with a
slight fall-off of numbers reading this blog and a fall-off in
Facebook activity.
Doomer
fatigue?
How
long before we have to say that we’ve got it and we can’t keep up
with the obsessive following of the race to the bottom?
That
has got me interested in taking pause and looking back to get some
sense of how we got from There to Here.
In
terms of the elite’s War on the Truth it is clear that media
organisations such as the BBC (I know far more about the British
media than the American one) have always tried to please their
political superiors and have not wanted to upset the applecart too
much.
However,
in the past they were always willing to ask questions. Now they are
plainly NOT and are no more than the propaganda arms of imperialist
governments.
I
always knew that 9/11 and the lead-up to the invasion of Iraq were
key in this. In the British context I was vaguely aware of the “dodgy
dossier”, sexed up by the government, to justify the illegal
invasion of a sovereign nation. I was aware,in the back of my mind,
of the case of Dr.David Kelly (althought I had forgotten his name and
of the whitewash that followed) and that the BBC had been forced to
apologise for telling the truth.
This
was followed by a purge of the BBC with management and some
journalists being removed.
Since
then, the BBC has died as a quasi-independent broadcaster and become
nothing more than the mouthpiece of the government.
It
is clear that Dr. Kelly was assassinated- at the very least the idea
that he committed suicide is preposterous.
The
British state has, in all probability, been responsible for at least
two high-profile cases (Dr Kelly and Princess Diana) and quite
possibly for the murder of Litvinenko (pinned on Vladimir Putin) as
well as the suiciding of Boris Berzovsky.
Below,
I have provided some resources to look at the background to Britain’s
support for the invasion of Iraq.
·
Governors' decision was 'betrayal' of corporation
·
Tribunal to rule whether minutes can be published
Coverage
on the BBC and the Hutton enquiry in the Guardian HERE
Conspiracy
Files:Was Dr
Kelly murdered?
Chris Tryhorn
25
September, 2007
I'm
not usually one for conspiracy theories but the death of David Kelly
struck me at the time as distinctly odd, sinister even. Over the
summer of 2003, when like most journalists I was gripped by the
Hutton inquiry, the suspicion that he may not have taken his own life
was always at the back of my mind. So I was intrigued by last
night's Conspiracy
Files on
BBC2, which revisited the tragedy.
To
recap: David Kelly was the government scientist at the centre of a
huge, poisonous row between the government and the BBC. The row arose
from allegations that the government used evidence in a dossier
making the case for war in Iraq knowing that the information was
probably wrong. Kelly was outed by the government as the source of
the controversial report by Today reporter Andrew Gilligan and
endured a notoriously vicious grilling at the hands of a
parliamentary select committee.
Three
days later he was found dead, slumped against a tree on Harrowdown
Hill, near Oxford, his wrists slashed and half-empty packets of the
drug Coproxamol at his side. The Hutton
inquiry -
which called witnesses including the Prime Minister, Alastair
Campbell and the future head of MI6 - was set up to investigate his
death. The report, published in January 2004, exonerated the
government and excoriated the BBC's journalism, leading to the
departure of both the corporation's chairman and director-general.
Lord Hutton also concluded that Kelly had committed suicide, the
assumption that had prevailed from the time of his death.
Last
night's programme spoke to a number of people who have doubts about
the official verdict, including the earnest Kelly-ologist Rowena
Thursby and
Liberal Democrat MP Norman
Baker.
(There was also a rather excitable barrister who claimed to have a
hotline to international intelligence agencies and spotted
similarities between Kelly's death and the plot of a Tom Clancy
novel.) As with most conspiracy theories, the case against the
official verdict springs from strange details rather than compelling
counter-evidence.
Many
medical experts find Kelly's method of suicide unconvincing. Would
the incisions to his wrists have caused sufficient blood loss to kill
him? Paramedics who attended the scene have spoken out about how
little blood they saw. And why did the toxicology report indicate a
level of Coproxamol in his system that is usually non-fatal?
The
sceptics also believe that the Hutton inquiry was in some respects
inadequate. It supplanted a standard inquest, invoking an almost
unprecedented legal power to do so, but did not take evidence under
oath. The doubters think evidence pertaining to the physical
circumstances of the death was insufficiently heard and scrutinised.
There
are also questions about Kelly's state of mind. Clearly, he was
undergoing great stress and had been to some extent publicly
humiliated after a proud career working as one of Britain's top
experts on Iraq's weapons programme. But emails sent shortly before
he went out for his last walk looked forward to a time when the
controversy would "blow over". Why would he be suicidal
given that the worst had apparently already happened?
So
can you infer from these doubts that Kelly was murdered? Hardly,
despite whisperings from intelligence sources that it was a "wet
disposal", ie a rushed assassination. And who would have
benefited? Did the secret services really need to silence him, given
that so much had come out anyway? A former colleague of his who was
highly critical of the way Kelly was treated by the government
scoffed at the notion. Last night's programme also put some of the
medical irregularities to independent experts, who were able to
explain them way.
Nevertheless
there are many peculiarities about the case. Perhaps because Kelly's
widow is sure that he killed himself, the "conspiracy theory"
has gained little ground. Nor is evidence abundant, and last night's
programme struggled to fill the hour. As the heat generated by the
Iraq war fades over the years, Kelly's death seems destined to be
abandoned by all but the most ardent conspiracy theorists and to go
down as merely a fishy footnote to a far greater political
controversy.
The Death of Dr. Kelly: An Open Case
Dr
David Kelly Iraq War Cover Up
Conspiracy - Norman Baker MP
Conspiracy - Norman Baker MP
The
Death of Dr. David Kelly. Murdered on the Orders of Her Majesty’s
Government?
By Dr. David Halpin and James Corbett
By Dr. David Halpin and James Corbett
26
November, 2014
On
July 18, 2003, British biowarfare expert and UN weapons inspector
David Kelly was found dead on Harrowdown Hill, near his home in
Oxfordshire. Ruled a suicide by the official judicial inquiry chaired
by Lord Hutton, now a group of British doctors is challenging the
Attorney General’s decision not to hold a coroner’s inquest into
the death, citing the overlooked, suppressed and modified evidence
suggesting Dr. Kelly was murdered.
This
is the GRTV Backgrounder on The Death of Dr. David Kelly.
From
the outset, there have been questions about the nature and timing of
Dr. David Kelly’s death, as well as the official investigation and
subsequent inquiry into the events of that day.
As
a UN weapons inspector who had been to Iraq dozens of times to
investigate allegations of Saddam Hussein’s bioweapons stockpile,
Kelly became the centre of attention in the summer of 2003 when he
was revealed as the source of a controversial BBC report alleging
that the Blair government had “sexed up” its dossier on Iraqi
WMD. In the wake of that scandal, he was called to testify before a
parliamentary committee investigating the BBC report and was
aggressively questioned about his role in the scandal. He was
found dead two days later.
As
a UN weapons inspector who had been to Iraq dozens of times to
investigate allegations of Saddam Hussein’s bioweapons stockpile,
Kelly became the centre of attention in the summer of 2003 when he
was revealed as the source of a controversial BBC report alleging
that the Blair government had “sexed up” its dossier on Iraqi
WMD. In the wake of that scandal, he was called to testify before a
parliamentary committee investigating the BBC report and was
aggressively questioned about his role in the scandal. He was found
dead two days later.
The
official inquiry into that death, the Hutton Inquiry, was quickly
convened and issue its report in January 2004, officially concluding
that Dr. Kelly had taken his own life by a combination of slitting
his left wrist and overdosing on coproxamol. Over the course of the
decade, however, information has come to light suggesting that the
Hutton Inquiry not only ignored key evidence in the case pointing to
foul play, but that the report in fact actively covered up such
evidence.
The
cover up into Dr. Kelly’s death seemingly began before it even
started. Operation Mason, the official police investigation into Dr.
Kelly’s death, started nine hours before his family even reported
him missing.
One
of the key witnesses to the Hutton Inquiry and the man who found Dr.
Kelly’s body, Detective Constable Coe, now admits that there was
surprisingly little blood at the scene for a man who supposedly bled
to death. Stunningly, he also admits that he lied to the inquiry in
saying that there was only himself and his partner at the scene that
day, now admitting that there was an unidentified third man there
that many have speculated was someone with the security services.
David
Bartlett, the paramedic who pronounced Dr. Kelly dead at the scene,
claimed that his body had obviously been moved and confirmed there
was surprisingly little blood near the body, saying “I’ve seen
more blood at a nosebleed than I saw there.” He also said that as
soon as the body was found, the police threw a “blackout” around
the scene. He was even banned from speaking to his own control room
over radio, the first time that this had happened in his career.
A
flight log released under the Freedom of Information Act earlier this
year proves that a helicopter landed at the scene just 90 minutes
after the discovery of the body. The flight log, which has been
heavily redacted, shows that the helicopter only remained on the
ground for five minutes before taking off. To this day, the presence
of the helicopter at the scene has never been officially explained
and there is no indication as to what it was dropping off or picking
up from the scene of the crime.
In
2008, one of his colleagues and personal confidants, Mai Pederson,
came forward to say that Dr. Kelly could not have killed himself in
the manner suggested because he had difficulty using his right hand
for strenuous activities because of a painful injury he had sustained
to his right elbow. Still, the official conclusion of the Hutton
Inquiry holds that Kelly used a knife in his right hand to slit his
left wrist.
Perhaps
the most compelling evidence, however, is the testimony of a group of
doctors who have come together in recent years to provide expert
testimony challenging the official claim of suicide.
It
is their contention that the verdict of suicide does not fit with the
medical evidence presented in the case, and they have formed a group
in recent years to petition the UK government to convene a coroner’s
inquest into the death, something that should have been done in the
first place but was not.
Last
week I had the chance to talk to one of the doctors who has been
vocal in challenging the results of the Hutton Inquiry, Dr. David
Halpin. I asked him about some of the medical evidence that
problematizes the official verdict that Dr. Kelly’s death was a
suicide.
Shortly
after the group of doctors and barristers questioning Dr. Kelly’s
death formed in 2009 to put pressure on the government to re-open the
investigation, it was revealed that Lord Hutton had taken the
extraordinary measure of classifying all of the medical records used
by the inquiry, including the post-mortem findings and photographs of
the body, for 70 years, a decision that not even the Ministry of
Justice was able to explain the legal basis for.
A
widespread public backlash forced the government to release the
post-mortem documents in late 2010. After reviewing the post-mortem,
Dr. Michael Powers, QC, a former coroner and one of the doctors
demanding an inquest, noted that there was in fact no new information
revealed in the report and that the release of the documents may have
been an attempt to close off the option of a coroner’s inquest into
the death in the face of massive public support for the reopening of
the Kelly case.
Indeed,
in June of 2011, UK Attorney General Dominic Grieve did refuse to
open an inquest into the matter.
Now,
Dr. Halpin is involved in an attempt to open a judicial review into
the decision not to convene an inquest on the death. Paying for the
proceedings out of his own pocket, this retired orthopedic surgeon is
now shouldering the brunt of the responsibility for attempting to see
a proper investigation into the many discrepancies in the Dr. Kelly
case.
In
recent months an independent grassroots campaign to raise funds for
the legal battle for an inquest has sprung up, and the public
continues to show great concern over this case.
In
my conversation, I had the chance to ask Dr. Halpin about the
public’s support, and why convening an inquest into Dr. Kelly’s
death is a matter of such importance.
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