Dr David Kelly: New evidence points to Blair government cover-up

A Daily mail investigation casts new light into the death of Government Scientist, Dr. David Kelly.

The official story of Dr David Kelly is that he took his own life in an Oxfordshire wood by overdosing on painkillers and cutting his left wrist with a pruning knife.

A subsequent official inquiry led by Lord Hutton ruled that Dr. Kelly committed suicide.

But revelations of an anonymous letter stating his colleagues were warned to stay away from his funeral and comments by prominent doctors and MP's questions the official claim.
  1. U.S. debt is heading towards "unsustainable levels," according to the bipartisan Congressional Budget Office. In the last 18 months, the federal debt has swelled from $5.5 trillion to $8.6 trillion.
  2. Protests by thousands of Bangladeshi garment workers demanding higher pay turned main roads in the capital Dhaka into a battleground on Wednesday, as riot police struggled to break up the crowds.
  3. For the first time, Israel has embarked on a plan to sell the land of the 1948 Palestinian refugees (92% of Israel) to Jewish individuals. Clearly this is in violation of international law.

Focus Of The Week

Government forces fired on hundreds of rock-throwing protesters in Indian Kashmir on Tuesday, killing a young man as a seven-day curfew was lifted, locals and officials said. A woman was killed in later clashes.
Tar balls found on a Texas beach were confirmed as the first evidence that gushing crude oil from the Deepwater Horizon well had reached all the Gulf states.
Social justice activist Jaggi Singh surrendered to Toronto police early Tuesday morning to comply with a warrant following June’s G20 protests.
Graphic images of the war in Bosnia were shown at a London court today as Ejup Ganic, its former president, began his battle against extradition to Serbia, where he is accused of war crimes in 1992.
Pluspetrol's Jun. 19 petroleum spill has left the Marañón River, in the Peruvian Amazon, with oil and grease levels thousands of times greater than the maximum allowed for human consumption, affecting more than 4,000 local residents.