Of
all the “major” conspiracy theories in the world at the moment, the one that I
think is most likely to be exposed, proved true and generally accepted in the
coming few years, is the assassination of Princess Diana. The media coverage of
this event has been impossible to completely supress and today, thanks to a
Facebook friend, another article has come my way, see: http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/429312/EXCLUSIVE-How-David-Cameron-knew-of-Princess-Diana-murder-plot.
It shows that there is evidence being released through contacts in the British special
forces organization the SAS, that murder suspicions were circulating
endemically. An interview with the ex-special forces officer, and polar
explorer, Sir Ranulph Fiennes, carried out by Diana researcher Jon King (see: http://www.consciousape.com/tag/jon-king/), shows
that the UK Government had a contingency plan for killing people by sabotaging
their cars in tunnels. This method, known in the special forces community as “Boston
Brakes”, involved planting a small explosive device on a car’s axle which would
cause the driver to lose control and the car swerve in one direction or
another, like into the path of a lorry for example… or into the walls of a
tunnel. In a tunnel hit, there would be assassins hiding nearby to rush into
the tunnel and check that the target was dead; if they survived the crash they’d
be finished off with a lethal injection. In fact one additional form of this
method also involved using a very bright flash-gun which can blind somebody for
up to three minutes. This would be shone into the driver’s eyes just before the
car reached the tunnel. It’s not only Fiennes who reported this but the
renegade MI6 agent Richard Tomlinson, see: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7243053.stm. This
allegation may have been “dismissed”, but without a proper inquest we’ll never
know. This comes after many other such stunning revelations over the years,
such as the death of the white Fiat Uno driver, see: http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/12839/Diana-Fiat-driver-shot-in-the-head;
it’s odd that somebody shooting themselves would be able to inflict two gunshot wounds to their head.
The
closest we’ve come to any kind of investigation, before the current Royal
Military Police one, was the 2007 coroner’s inquest in London. This returned a
verdict of “Unlawful Killing”; in normal circumstances this would mean the
police would be called immediately to investigate further and decide whether
there were any suspicious circumstances that might warrant a murder inquiry. This
inquest was reported very badly by the media, and there’s only so badly you can
report anything in the media by accident!
British documentary film-maker Keith Allen has covered this debacle in his
astounding 2011 film Unlawful Killing.
This was produced in cooperation with Mohammed Al-Fayed, father of Dodi who
died with Diana that night in Paris; al-Fayed has tirelessly campaigned to
prove that his son was murdered and bring the UK Government to justice. The
film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival and was listed for distribution,
however British lawyers insisted on eighty-seven cuts being made otherwise it
would be banned in the United Kingdom; Allen refused and so it was indeed
banned, see: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/may/07/unlawful-killing-film-you-wont-see.
Normally at this point I’d post a link to a bootleg video site showing the
film, but there’s no point; any such link posted goes dead very quickly,
usually within hours. I recommend you just search for it with: “Unlawful,
killing, Diana” and it should come up somewhere if you keep looking. I personally
remember the night Diana died very well; I was on a night shift at the hospital,
and I and other staff crowded round the television in the rest room watching it
whenever we had a moment free. One thing I recall very well is the doctors and
nurses, a lot of them trained A&E practitioners, saying again and again: “What?
Is she still in the tunnel? Why haven’t they moved her from the scene to
hospital?” So suspicions were raised straight away. Then we got a call through
from the Trust director to go outside and lower the hospital flag to half-mast.
It was then a few minutes later that her death was formerly announced.
No comments:
Post a Comment