" I will probably be found dead in the woods."  Dr. David Kelly

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" I will probably be found dead in the woods." 
 

Who Killed Kelly?

Dr. David Kelly was a United Nations weapons inspector in Iraq.
After telling Her Majesties Government there were no weapons of mass destruction (WMD) in Iraq. He told
David Broucher, a former British Ambassador. "I will probably be found dead in the woods." 
When he was found dead in the woods Tony Blair was asked.
“Have you got blood on your hands.” Blair refused to answer.

An Oxford publisher has now confirmed Kelly was writing a book detailing exactly how his reports, that Saddam Hussein did not have anything like WMD, were ignored by Her Majesties Government.
Kelly was also an expert in biological warfare agents. The book  covered Kelly’s secret advice on germ warfare given to the brutal South African apartheid regime. This aspect of how Her Majesties Government really works could prove more explosive than the entire catalogue of Iraq lies.

Anthrax War, a new film about biological weapons, debuted in London on the sixth anniversary of Dr. Kelly's death.
The film's director, Bob Coen, stated. "We have proved there is a black market in anthrax. David Kelly was of particular interest to us because he was a world expert on anthrax and he was involved in assisting the secret germ warfare program in apartheid South Africa." 
Bob Coen's investigation takes him from the U.S. to the U.K. and from the edge of Siberia to the tip of Africa. In a rare interview, Coen confronts 'Doctor Death' Wouter Basson, who headed Project Coast, the South African apartheid-era bio-warfare program,". Project Coast allegedly used germ warfare against sections of the country's black population. A Torrent download of Anthrax War is available. Clips can be found on YouTube. 

Dr. David Kelly was but one 13 scientists “suicided”

 

9/11: The Mother Of All Inside Jobs
 

 

Conclusive Proof
Al Megrahi
Was Framed

The latest Lockerbie documents to be published disclose that in 1989 the FBI told Dumfries and Galloway police that they wanted to offer Tony Gauci "unlimited money" and $10,000 immediately.

Following the Lockerbie trial at the former US base Camp Zeist, Utrecht, Holland, international lawyers, including senior United Nations officials, voiced their surprise at the verdict and grave doubts about the prosecution evidence.

A fragment of a timer circuit board, that allegedly may have triggered the bomb that brought down Flight 103 was used against the Libyan Agent Abdelbaset al-Megrahi. We now know the fragment did not even come from any of the twenty timers sold to Libya. Even it's dimensions did not match. The FBI "scientist" who falsely indentified the fragment was subsequently fired. Yet another fact never mentioned in the media is that this type of timer-circuit-board is purposely designed NOT to survive the explosion it triggers.
 

Lockerbie: September 2, 2009

The Al-Megrahi Papers


Evidence published online today by al Megrahi's lawyers show that Tony Gauci, the CIA's star witness at the Dutch trial was paid around $3Million to change his original identification of the man who visited his shop in Malta. This took seventeen visits to the "rouges  gallery". In the process Guci also changed his original story that the man did not buy a shirt to the man did buy a shirt. 

 The documents disclose that in 1989 the FBI told Dumfries and Galloway police that they wanted to offer Tony Gauci "unlimited money" and $10,000 immediately.
Gauci was visited no less than fifty times by detectives before the trial.
In twenty-three police interviews Gauci gave contradictory evidence about the man who visited his shop to buy clothes.
Megrahi's lawyers say the police and prosecution breached the rules on witness interviews, using "suggestive" lines of questioning and allowing "irregular" identification line-ups.

The papers published today were due to be heard by the appeal court next month. However Mahgrai was blackmailed into dropping his appeal if wished to be released before he died. Dr Jim Sweeny who lost his daughter on Flight 103 hopes to access the papers and persuade the government to open the Public Inquiry Mrs Thatcher refused point blank to open.

"I continue to protest my innocence how could I fail to do so? I have no desire to add to the upset of many people I know are profoundly affected by what happened in Lockerbie. My intention is only for the truth to be made known." Abdel baset al Megrahi
 

                             More On Lockerbie
 

 

 

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