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From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Tony Gosling
Sent: Sunday, August 02, 2009 9:53 PM
To: UK 9/11 & 7/7 Truth
Subject: [UK-911-Truth] Big Issue 7/7: THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH


7/7: THE SEARCH FOR TRUTH

Four years after the July 7 bombings, conspiracy theories are rife.
Adam Forrest finds out why survivors and analysts alike believe an
independent inquiry is the only way to get resolution

The Big Issue Cymru edition, No. 672, www.bigissuecymru.co.uk, July
13-19 2009, pp. 19-21, adam.forrest(at)bigissuescotland.com

http://www.911forum.org.uk/board/viewtopic.php?t=17782

For those injured in the central London bombings, the story of 7/7
returns to them only in fragments. Jagged memories of the awful,
piercing moments are surrounded by understandable confusion. John
Tulloch, a university lecturer on his way back to Wales that day, was
sitting just a few feet away from Mohammad Sidique Khan on a Tube
train to Paddington when his world turned upside down.
"I was so concussed I wasn't aware," he says of his miraculous
survival. "I was either being stood up to go into an ambulance or I
was being moved from one to the other. That was when I got that
dreadful feeling of vertigo. I was probably thinking: 'What the hell
is this?' It was like the floor had fallen away."
Individual experiences are inevitably disjointed, but four years on,
survivors and family members of those killed expect the authorities to
have pieced together a more complete story by now. Remarkably, there
has yet to be a full public inquiry into the 7/7 attacks, despite the
terrible loss of life - 52 dead - and myriad ramifications for
security and emergency operations.
Rachel North is one of those caught up in the blasts still looking for
answers. She describes the aftermath of the explosion on the
Piccadilly Line tube train as "a dream you can't remember, a puzzle
you can't solve". North is part of a group pursuing legal action in
the High Court for an inquiry to shed light on the intelligence
failures only hinted at in the Home Office report and two studies by
the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC). "It's important to know
who knew what, when, and why operational decisions were made," she
tells The Big Issue. "There's a difference between studies by certain
bodies and a full public inquiry - a big helicopter view, where a
senior judge can go through it forensically, witnesses can be
compelled, all the information can be put in one place, and findings
and recommendations can be made.
"It's normal to have a public inquiry for a train crash or an
industrial accident, something where there is clear need for learning.
So the fact the government hasn't had one adds to the lack of trust
and feeling there is something to hide. If Mohammad Sidique Khan and
his friends were falling through the gaps, that's the sort of thing a
public inquiry should be looking at. When you have an information
gaps, some people will fill it with conspiracy theories."
Andy Hayman, former head of counter-terrorism at the Met who was made
a CBE in the aftermath of the bombings, has also now called for an
inquiry: "There has been no overview, no pulling together of each
strand of review - no-one can be sure if key issues have been
missed."
The government's own account, read to the Commons in May 2006 by Home
Secretary John Reid, described the four bombers - Mohammad Sidique
Khan, Shedzad Tanweer, Germaine Lindsay and Hasib Hussain - as "clean
skins": out-of-the-blue home-grown attackers whom the intelligence
services had no reason to suspect. Yet the trial of five men found
guilty of a fertiliser bomb plot connected to al-Qaeda revealed
evidence Sidique Khan was known to MI5. Khan was in contact with at
least one of the convicted men under surveillance, and had been placed
on a watch-list in 2004. Intelligence officers had taken pictures of
him as far back as 2001.
Even the nature of the explosives used in the July 7 bombings remains
unclear. The ISC report, one undertaken by a group of MPs chosen by
the government, says only that it "appears" they were home-made. Yet
the extent of the flames and heat reported by eyewitness survivors
suggests more sophisticated explosives than the primitive compounds
found in the bombers' bathtub in a Leeds flat.
Nafeez Ahmed, director of the Institute for Policy Research and
Development, and author of The London Bombings: An Independent
Inquiry, finds it "remarkable and untenable" that the ISC continues to
insist British intelligence could not have foreseen the serious threat
from Khan and his associates.
He believes evidence of wider al-Qa'ida involvement has been
suppressed to deflect awkward questions about how a well-organised
terror network carried on unchecked in Britain for a decade.
Although the second ISC report acknowledges Khan and Tanweer travelled
to Pakistan for operational training, it ignores the regular telephone
contact between Khan and Haroon Rashid Aswat, an al-Qa'ida lieutenant
once in direct contact with Osama Bin Laden, and believed by some US
investigators to have a key role in masterminding 7/7. "If you look at
the totality of the information that's come out, there is a fairly
coherent picture that there was an international network," Ahmed tells
The Big Issue. "How can you be a youth worker in Dewsbury (Khan) and
suddenly get connected to al-Qaeda camp in Pakistan? It doesn't work
like that.
"There were circles they were moving in, and there are consistent
connections between several different plots. There was a social
network there."
In 2005, former Justice Department prosecutor John Loftus claimed MI6
had used Haroon Rashid Aswat as a double agent, leading to suspicions
the intelligence services are compromised by deals made with senior
Islamist figures. Though he is believed to be in Broadmoor high
security prison awaiting extradition to the US, the UK has not charged
Aswat in connection with the July 7 bombings.
"By ignoring these issues, the government is leaving us in a state of
insecurity," Ahmed adds. "By not resolving the questions, the
government fuels suspicions that something murky is going on, and can
lead to more outlandish ideas."
It will come as no surprise that conspiracy theorists have piled
fancies upon these anomalies to come up with all kinds of sinister
plots by MI5, Mossad and the New World Order. The giddiest of the
amateur films swirling around the internet, 7/7 The Ripple Effect,
alleges that the four bombers were tricked into thinking they were
taking part in a mock-attack exercise.
Made by someone calling himself Muad Dib, it points towards Nick
Kollerstrom's discovery that the 7.40am train from Luton to London
(the one used by the bombers, according to the government account) was
cancelled, and the published CCTV picture of the four men looked
doctored. In another odd twist, a controlled explosion company van was
pictured next to the blown-up bus in Tavistock Square.
Ideas of a carefully designed cover-up are easy enough to dispel.
Subsequent evidence indicated the bombers boarded the earlier 7.25am
train, and more CCTV footage released earlier this year clearly showed
the suicide bombers gathering at King's Cross station that morning. It
turns out the suspicious van belonged to company specialising in small-
scale, non-explosive construction demolition.
Much of The Ripple Effect's warped logic depends on a tube-attack
simulation prepared on the morning of July 7 by Peter Power, head of a
London based crisis management firm. Power appeared widely on news
networks that day, explaining both the coincidence, but also why the
central London transport network was an obvious, and widely-
acknowledged target.
The former Scotland Yard officer describes the spread of the film's
theory that the bombers were conned into taking part in a live
simulation - ¬though Power's company only organises lecture
presentations - as "quite menacing and worrying". He has passed on
anonymous hate mail threatening him with "no mercy" to the
Metropolitan Police.
As for the conspiracy creator Muad Dib - he has now been identified as
John Hill, a white-bearded Sheffield man living in County Meath in
Ireland. He faces extradition to the UK on a charge of perverting the
course of justice for sending his DVDs to the judge and jury of a
trial linked to the attacks.
"The reason I'm against the conspiracy theories is that you can't
tackle home-grown terrorism if you're not willing to admit that it
exists," explains North. "To deal with it, you have to accept it's
real. It's like people refusing to accept measles exists, refusing to
get vaccinated, and then going around spreading it."
As a regular blogger, North has also been sent nasty messages by some
of the wilder theorists, but is more worried that seeds of unnecessary
suspicion are been sown in communities where DVD copies are passed
around. One opinion poll for Channel 4 found around a quarter of
British Muslims thought the government or MI5 were involved in the
bombings.
"The eccentricities of Mr Kollerstrom and Muad Dib are really not that
important," she says. "But if it's having an effect on people who
might then not report things, because they simply don't accept that
there's such a thing as Islamist home-grown terrorism, then that's a
catastrophically crippling blow for anyone trying to prevent
terrorism."
Tony Gosling, a 7/7 "truther" who runs a website examining conspiracy
theories, believes fellow researchers don't always offer such neat and
tidy versions of events. "The problem with The Ripple Effect
documentary is that it presents the idea of the bombers as patsies, as
fact," he says. "It is by far the most bizarre (of the online
conspiracy films), it has been discredited in some important places,
and mixes fact and speculation.
"There are all sorts of possibilities, and I don't pretend to know the
answers. What I'm interested in, and what a public inquiry would do,
is sift through the evidence. We're not stirring up discontent. We're
saying there are all these questions and develop your own
understanding of what happened."
Ours is a skeptical age, and truth appears an increasingly relative
quality. Without a more thorough attempt by the government to explain
one of the most important events in recent British history, too many
people are left: to invent their own nightmares.

alternative scottish Big Issue version is here
http://www.streetnewsservice.org/index.php?page=archive_detail&article
ID=4281




 

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