http://www.observer.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,6903,500664,00.html



Britain snatched babies' bodies for nuclear labs

Eddie Goncalves
Sunday June 3, 2001
The Observer

Britain's nuclear industry was involved in a top secret international
operation to steal dead babies for up to three decades, according to newly
declassified documents.

The shocking revelation comes in the wake of the controversy over the organ
retention scandal at some of this country's leading hospitals.

The papers, released by the American Department of Energy, show that
scientists from the UK Atomic Energy Authority removed children's bones and
bodies to ship to the United States for classified nuclear experiments.

Among the hundreds of pages of documents released are letters exchanged
between American and British government scientists in which they discuss
levels of radiation in the ribs of stillborn babies and lists of dead
children's bodies obtained from the Middlesex Hospital and spirited to
American nuclear laboratories.

The human 'guinea pigs' are not named, but assigned codenames as part of
tight security surrounding the experiments. Baby B-1102, for example, is
listed as a boy who died aged eight months. Baby B-595 was a girl who was 13
months old when she died.

The report listing them - stamped 'top secret' - acknowledges the help of
doctors at the Central Middlesex Hospital's Department of Morbid Anatomy and
Histology.

Although the US government has released hundreds of documents about the
operation, it has retained even more sensitive papers thought to detail some
of the most embarrassing aspects of collusion between the British and
American authorities. Asked to release a file entitled Classified Discussions
at Harwell, the Oxfordshire headquarters of the British government's nuclear
research activities, the US Department of Energy told The Observer: 'This
document has been determined to be not declassifiable and has been removed
from this folder.'

An investigation into the 'body snatching' programme - codenamed Project
Sunshine - ordered by former President Bill Clinton, was scathing:
'Researchers employed deception in the solicitation of bones of deceased
babies from intermediaries with access to human remains.'

Among the documents obtained by The Observer is the transcript of a secret
meeting in Washington of Project Sunshine's keenest minds. They show that
Willard Libby, a renowned scientist who later won the Nobel prize for his
research into carbon dating techniques, instructed colleagues to skirt the
law in their search for bodies.

'Human samples are of prime importance, and if anybody knows how to do a good
job of body-snatching, they will really be serving their country,' Libby
said. 'We hired an expensive law firm to look up the law on body-snatching.
It is not very encouraging. It shows how very difficult it is going to be to
do it legally.'

British scientists collaborated with the project from the outset in the early
Fifties, the documents show. Correspondence between them and their American
counterparts at the US Atomic Energy Commission includes a letter from the UK
Atomic Energy Authority giving information about stillborn children whose
bones had been experimented on in Britain.

Other reports compare bodies obtained in England - known as 'Area Five' by
the project's controllers - and in San Francisco. One paper says parts from
British babies and children up to the age of 10 years were 'readily
available'.

At the same time as supplying the Americans, British scientists from Harwell
and the Medical Research Council conducted their own research on dead
children. Between 1955 and 1970, they collected around 6,000 bodies.

Jean Prichard, whose baby died in 1957, said her child's legs were removed by
hospital doctors and taken to Harwell without permission.

To prevent her from finding out what had happened, she says she was forbidden
to dress her daughter for her funeral. 'I asked if I could put her
christening robe on her, but I wasn't allowed to, and that upset me terribly
because she wasn't christened. No one asked me about doing things like that,
taking bits and pieces from her.'

British governments have always denied any involvement in Project Sunshine,
and the link - first suggested in a 1995 Channel 4 documentary - was not
investigated for the American report.

However, new documents released by the US government and reports now in the
UK Public Records Office at Kew, South-west London, show leading British
scientists were involved in body-snatching for both nations.

They indicate that the British conducted tests on babies from Hong Kong, and
acquired body parts from doctors in Cambridge, Newmarket, Norwich and
Chelmsford, as well as the coroner for west London. A leading cancer research
centre, the Royal Marsden Hospital, London, took part in the project, the
documents say.

Records show that almost half the bodies were of newborn or very young
babies. Laboratories at Cambridge University burnt the bones.

Nuclear scientists in Britain say their research ended in the Seventies.

In the Nineties, researchers from Aldermaston and Harwell obtained foetal and
placental tissues from abortions carried out in Oxfordshire and Cumbria,
although this time, they say, it was with the consent of the families.


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