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Nuked Blood: The police presented “Ticking Timebomb” with a report on crimes at Mod

The MET police have received an allegations of the criminal misconduct of civil servants on the mod

The mirror's evidence dossier was handed over to the police

Nuclear veterans handed over the Ministry of Defense “a ticking time bomb” after submitting a criminal complaint.

A long list of civil servants was accused of covering radiation experiments on troops during the Cold War due to potential misconduct in the public office due to a campaign.

High-ranking civil servants of the MET Police will now evaluate a 500-page evidence dossier Der Spiegel during his 3-year examination of the Nuked blood scandal.

The veteran John Morris, who suffered from the washing of contaminated uniforms on the Christmas island of cancer and a 60-year blood disease, lacks the results of blood tests and X-rays of the breast during and after his service.

John, 87, from Rochdale, said: “We said Keir Strander what happened, we told his deputy, we told the Minister of Defense, and they did not act, so it is that it came to. We gave them every opportunity.

“This is a ticking time bomb for your own production, and the only way to defuse it is that the prime minister is sitting down and speaks to us.”

The complaint was submitted in Westminster on the eve of the VE day when politicians and kings gathered to honor the victims of what was rigidly called the “largest generation”. But it was the 40,000 men who took part in the nuclear weapons program who secured this peace – and who have been lied to since then.

The scandal blew after decades of rejection in 2022 when the mirror discovered a secret memo about blood tests by the group captain Terry Gledhill, which had led aircraft through the mushrooms on sampling emissions for scientists.

They showed “gross irregularity” and after a long legal dispute with the mod, his daughter Jane found that most of them were missing in his official medical records. They also showed that he had been X -ray and bloodily checked afterwards.

Grandmother Jane, 73, from Poole, is the first victim of the complaint. She said: “I do this for my father because he asked the doctors for years what was wrong with him, and they did not know that he was even at the nuclear tests if he hadn't told it. After he died, I found that he had left me a message that asked me to be responsible for the truth.

Read more: Nuked Blood: The men who were asked to make the record clear

Jane stops a picture of Terry, which is also shown in his cockpit
Jane affects her father Terry's wishes, who begged her before he died to find out the truth(Picture: BNPS)))
Terry shown in the cockpit
Terry shown in the cockpit(Picture: Jane O'Connor)))

They were supported by Greater Manchester, Andy Burnham, who compares NUK with the infected blood and Hillsborough scandals and called it “the greatest injustice of everyone”.

He said: “This included tens of thousands of people who served our country overseas, and here they fight in the wilderness decades later to find out the truth about what happened to them and to get a level of justice.”

He warned other politicians and civil servants that if they did not act, they risked to make themselves complicit.

“It is obliged that every single person in public office, which is rightly respectful today, that those that are used by our country are now moving forward and receiving truth and justice for our nuclear test veterans. If they do not do so as a country, the words we talk about our veterans will be hollow.

Our dossier shows how the blood test program was publicly rejected by the mod in 2001, which High Court was given false information in 2008 and the 2018 parliament was misled. The truth was obviously after the mirror discovered a high -quality secret database that contained nuclear weapons that contained more than 30 commands for mass blood tests. Individuals called for testing.

Civilians and indigenous population have also been examined, and dozens of veterans have reported that the relevant information is missing in their medical documents.

The veterans claim that the database was illegally classified as a national security risk, which kept their content hidden from complaints and pension claims before them.

The evidence includes testimonies that were presented to the public on behalf of the mods in front of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal, the admission to freedom of information, medical records and historical documents.

The list of potential witnesses includes veterans, descendants, former and current ministers as well as high -ranking civil servants from the legal department mod, awe and state government department. The crime of misconduct has a maximum lifelong prison sentence for everyone who acted illegally and consequently inflicted damage to someone.

A spokesman for the MET police said: “On Wednesday, May 7th, in connection with non-acting allegations against a public institution, a report has been presented. The report is currently evaluated to determine the most suitable procedure. We have not initiated any examination in this phase.”

One spokesman for the mod said: “We refute these unfounded claims, and ministers and civil servants acted properly at that time. Information that the department holds in relation to the medical tests of service workers who took part in the British nuclear weapon tests.”

A spokesman for the GLD added: “The GLD is and has always been to maintain the rule of law and maintain the highest professional standards. This includes the way it is the way government departments in legal disputes.

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