Vet heroes of nuke tests denied truth as government 'committed crimes against its own military'

Exclusive:

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak under pressure to order a public inquiry into missing medical records of veterans during Defense Ministry nuclear tests. As Britain marks Armistice Day, Labor calls on Parliament to debate scandal

Nuclear test veterans crime MoD Canberra bombers' 'sniffer planes' were used to take samples from the heart of atomic clouds

The blood records of nuclear test veterans have been hidden for 70 years, the Mirror can reveal.

Cold War heroes want a public inquiry into whether they are victims of a criminal conspiracy by the state. Missing blood results meant veterans, such as Terry Gledhill, were denied proper care.

As Britain marks Armistice Day, Labor calls on Parliament to debate the scandal.

Test vets who suffered from mysterious illnesses for over 70 years could have been treated properly if doctors had known their blood had been atomized.

Sick heroes claim they were denied access to blood and urine records, which may have been tampered with or destroyed, a criminal offence.

Servicemen were unwittingly used in medical experiments during Cold War testing beginning in 1952, and now their families claim they have been betrayed for 70 years by the state.

Trials veterans nuclear crime ministry of defence
The PM will have to decide whether or not to launch an investigation (

Picture:

David Cliff/AP/REX/Shutterstock)

One of them, RAF storekeeper Bryan Towler, was told by the service that his records had most likely been destroyed due to "document retention policies at the time", and " unfortunately, we have no other way to find these folders".< /p>

Terry Gledhill, Jane O'Connor's father, was one of those affected.

She said, "He spent years of his life when he was sick, writing letters to specialists and hospitals trying to find out what was wrong with him."

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Vet heroes of nuke tests denied truth as government 'committed crimes against its own military'

Exclusive:

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak under pressure to order a public inquiry into missing medical records of veterans during Defense Ministry nuclear tests. As Britain marks Armistice Day, Labor calls on Parliament to debate scandal

Nuclear test veterans crime MoD Canberra bombers' 'sniffer planes' were used to take samples from the heart of atomic clouds

The blood records of nuclear test veterans have been hidden for 70 years, the Mirror can reveal.

Cold War heroes want a public inquiry into whether they are victims of a criminal conspiracy by the state. Missing blood results meant veterans, such as Terry Gledhill, were denied proper care.

As Britain marks Armistice Day, Labor calls on Parliament to debate the scandal.

Test vets who suffered from mysterious illnesses for over 70 years could have been treated properly if doctors had known their blood had been atomized.

Sick heroes claim they were denied access to blood and urine records, which may have been tampered with or destroyed, a criminal offence.

Servicemen were unwittingly used in medical experiments during Cold War testing beginning in 1952, and now their families claim they have been betrayed for 70 years by the state.

Trials veterans nuclear crime ministry of defence
The PM will have to decide whether or not to launch an investigation (

Picture:

David Cliff/AP/REX/Shutterstock)

One of them, RAF storekeeper Bryan Towler, was told by the service that his records had most likely been destroyed due to "document retention policies at the time", and " unfortunately, we have no other way to find these folders".< /p>

Terry Gledhill, Jane O'Connor's father, was one of those affected.

She said, "He spent years of his life when he was sick, writing letters to specialists and hospitals trying to find out what was wrong with him."

>

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