Government death 'explanation' challenged
WorldNetDaily
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David Kelly |
LONDON – When the British Parliament reassembles in October after the summer recess finally it will decide whether the investigation into the death of scientist David Kelly should be reopened, according to a report from Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin.
Tony Blair's government, which had commissioned Kelly to determine if Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, concluded the scientist committed suicide.
But there have been unanswered questions ever since.
Now Justice Minister Kenneth Clarke and Attorney-General Dominic Grieve – members of the Cameron government – have been studying the findings of a team of medical experts who after seven years investigating reported Kelly was murdered.
If their report is accepted there would be an unprecedented, full-scale inquest that could embroil members of the Blair government, possibly even as defendants.
"We could see Tony Blair if not in the dock at least in the witness box. He has questions to answer that have not been put to him, or anybody else, on how Dr. Kelly died – and why," said Stephen Frost, a member of the team.
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Sept. 4, 2010