UK Security Enforced Media Blackout of Government Child Abuse | News | teleSUR - 0 views
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Two British newspaper bosses claim that national security services prevented them from publishing allegations of a government pedophile ring in the 1980s on the grounds that it was intelligence that might damage national security. The executives were issued with the D-notices in 1984, when they were due to print damning details enclosed in a dossier on the child sex abuse scandal handed to them by former Labour minister, Barbara Castle. Officials say that no records of the media blackout notices can be found however, leading investigators into the case to believe that they were destroyed, further heightening suspicions of a government cover-up. Security officials said that files “going back beyond 20 years are not complete because files are reviewed and correspondence of a routine nature with no historical significance destroyed.” However, the security services deny a whitewash.
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The case, which was finally exposed June of this year, relates to a number of prominent politicians and security chiefs under Margaret Thatcher's government who repeatedly sexually and physically abused young boys, holding ‘sex parties’ in a central London residence. This month, a man who claims to have been a victim of the ring, revealed that he saw a Conservative Member of Parliament murder a young boy during one of these depraved sex parties, and that two other boys were killed by the gang. London's Metropolitan Police say they are taking the man's account seriously and are now investigating a “possible homicide.”