Friday 14 September 2018

Home of Chrs Busby is raided by police

Do you believe ANYTHING that is coming out of official Britain these days?

Notice the first line - 
A chemical weapons expert who appears on the Russia Today TV news channel has been arrested after officers discovered potentially hazardous materials at his home in Devon.

Home of British nuclear expert who appears on Russia Today is raided by police - as several officers are taken ill with suspected chemical poisoning

  • Dr Chris Busby's home in the sleepy Devon town of Bideford was raided by police
  • Officers attended the address initially over concerns about a woman's welfare
  • But officers complained of feeling unwell and were checked by an ambulance Hazardous Area Response Team
  • His house was sealed off and the 73-year-old chemicals expert was arrested
  • ncident is not being linked to the attempted murder of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury in March

13 September, 2018

A chemical weapons expert who appears on the Russia Today TV news channel has been arrested after officers discovered potentially hazardous materials at his home in Devon.

Former research scientist Dr Chris Busby - an outspoken critic of the British Government's handlings of the Salisbury poisoning - was held after officers reported feeling unwell during a raid on his property yesterday morning.
Police had initially targeted the address in the sleepy seaside town of Bideford over concerns for a woman's welfare.
However officers complained of feeling unwell and were immediately checked over by an ambulance Hazardous Area Response Team and fire crews.
A search of the property found items required analysis from specialist officers and a bomb disposal team.
Nuclear chemicals expert Dr Chris Busby who appears on Russian Today news, was arrested yesterday after his home in the sleepy seaside town of Bideford was raided
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Nuclear chemicals expert Dr Chris Busby who appears on Russian Today news, was arrested yesterday after his home in the sleepy seaside town of Bideford was raided
Devon and Cornwall Police said there is not believed to be any risk to the public, and the officers treated are unharmed and have returned to duty.
They are not linking the incident to the attempted murder of former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury in March.
Dr Busby, 73, is said to have his own laboratory at home and supposedly keeps, among other items, samples of radioactive mud taken near the Sellafield nuclear plant in Cumbria.
Neighbours of Dr Busby today told how police arrived at the address when he was having a row with his partner before officers searched the address.
One said: 'He comes over as quite an eccentric guy. All we know is that he's a retired scientist who keeps himself quite private. There's a woman living in there with him.
'I saw them both arguing with a police officer outside their front door when it all kicked off.'
Another said: 'It was pretty disconcerting to have the army bomb squad, along with dozens of police and firemen, turn up. It's usually so quiet along here.
'On the other hand if any house in Bideford was going to be the subject of an explosives scare you'd have put money on it being this one.'
A nearby shopkeeper said Dr Busby was often seen strolling around the narrow town centre lanes wearing his distinctive black beret.
'Bideford being the place it is there are already rumours about a Novichok incident,' she added.
'But it can't be that serious because he was back at the house with a police officer today.'
A statement from Devon and Cornwall Police said: 'Whilst at the address, some of our officer complained of feeling unwell and were immediately removed from the scene and a cordon put in place.
'The ambulance Hazardous Area Response Team (HART) attended and treated these officers, all of whom are unharmed and have since returned to duty.
'Following searches within the property, a number of items were found which require expert analysis from specialist officers and an Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) team.
'The house has been evacuated and enquiries are ongoing at the property.
'Officers have sought specialist advice and it has not been deemed necessary to evacuate any other properties; there is not believed to be any wider public risk at this time.'
Police have said that a 73-year-old man has been detained under the explosives act but will not confirm or deny that he is Dr Busby.
Dr Busby is one of the experts used by the Kremlin-backed Russia Today news channel, which today broadcast an interview with the two suspected novichok hitmen Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov
Dr Busby has previously accused the U.S of using depleted uranium weapons in Iraq causing cancer and birth defects.
He has also appeared in YouTube videos blaming the assassination plot to poison former Russian spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia with the nerve agent Novichok as a 'false flag' operation.
He believes the pair were really targeted by Britain or the U.S, who he has accused of trying to frame Russia because they fear President Vladimir Putin is beginning to break up the American monopoly on oil.
In one video he says: 'Just to make it perfectly clear, there's no way that there's any proof that the material that poisoned the Skripals came from Russia.'

Dr Chris Busby on the Skripal Russia Poisoning affair




This is another reason that the British authorities would dislike Chris’ activity



IN THE DARK, THE FIRST 2,000 TONS OF ‘NUCLEAR MUD’ IS DUMPED OFF PENARTH


The odd-looking Belgian motor-hopper MV Sloeber splits herself open from stem to stern to disgorge hundreds of tonnes of ‘nuclear mud’ into the sea off Penarth after dark last night

The first of hundreds of consignments of allegedly radioactive mud from the Somerset coast (adjacent to the Hinkley Point nuclear power station) was deposited off Penarth last night under cover of darkness.

 

The curious looking Belgian motor-hopper Sloeber made her first round trip from Hinkley Point to the Cardiff Grounds – a mile off shore from PenarthShe then  opened-up her belly underwater to disgorge thousands of tonnes of mud on one massive bowel movement” –   last night .

As darkness fell the MV Sloeber with at least 2,000 tonnes of mud aboard, had set out from the Hinkley Point nuclear complex and skirted around the Monkstone Light en route to the Cardiff Grounds

Although the Conservative-run Vale of Glamorgan Council has protested about the mud dumping scheme, not a single Labour Assembly member, councillor or MP has raised a so much as a peep of protest about what is easily the worst-ever case of deliberate pollution ever witnessed in Wales.
Last night the Belgian hopper MV Sloeber – loaded with 2,000 tonnes of mud dredged from the sea bed adjacent to 3 Somerset nuclear power stations – sailed around the far side of the Monkstone light and skirted the sandbanks.

Pointing towards Penarth; MV Sloeber brings the first cargo of ‘nuclear mud’ to be dumped in Penarth waters

As night fell she turned to port and headed directly towards Penarth,  pausing just a mile offshore to dump her controversial cargo into the shallow sea of the “Cardiff Grounds” – which up to now have only been used to deposit dredged mud from the approach channel to Cardif Docks .
Moving her bowels: Splitting herself open along her keel, Sloeber can open herself up beneath the waterline to let her cargo of mud fall to the sea bed of the Cardiff Grounds . Observers said it almost seemed as though the ship was defacating in Welsh waters.

Sloeber’s party trick is to split herself open from stem to stern with both halves of the ship opening up wide below the waterline to allow her cargo of mud to fall out of the ship under its own considerable weight .

In 3 months or so, when  all the thousands of tonnes of  mud from Hinkley Point have been dumped in the sea in Welsh waters,  the French energy company EDF will be able to wash its hands of all responsibility for this material and whatever lurks within it.
The nuclear mud dumping site – marked in red – Is just a mile off the Penarth shore. Burnham on Sea is on the opposite shore
As of last night the first consignment of English ‘nuclear mud’ become Wales’s problem.  The mud dropped from the belly of MV Sloeber last night will soon be washed ashore on the coastline between Penarth  and Lavernock – and could permanently change the shoreline.

Experts say the consequences of this operation – which involves the dumping of over 320,000 tonnes of English nuclear mud in Welsh Waters – may not become apparent for generations.

Meanwhile Sloeber returned to Hinkley Point to load more mud for another visit to Wales later today.

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