More neo-con malfeasance surfaces in Europe -- three "suicides" getting another look...
click on the link below for full article from wayne madsen
... (WMD) specialist and UN Iraq weapons inspector Dr. David Kelly. In what is widely believed to have been a Blair government cover-up, Lord Hutton, in his official report, concluded that Kelly committed suicide in a wooded area near his Oxfordshire home using a dull knife to cut his left wrist and ingesting 29 over-the-counter analgesic tablets.
snip
On March 9, 2005, Costas Tsalikidis, the Vodaphone telecommunications expert who discovered the U.S. eavesdropping system in Athens in early 2005, was found by his mother hanging from a rope in his apartment. There was no suicide note.
snip
After returning from their August holiday, French Socialist presidential candidate Ségolène Royal and her partner, French Socialist Party Secretary General Francois Hollande, discovered that their Paris apartment had been broken into and ransacked. Although nothing was stolen, Royal and Hollande reported the break-in to police. Royal also suspects that wiretaps were placed on her phone lines. After reporting the break-in, Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, France's leading neo-con and candidate for the right-wing UMP party in next year's presidential election, leaked the break-in story to the press, angering Royal and Hollande.
waynemadsenreport.com
... (WMD) specialist and UN Iraq weapons inspector Dr. David Kelly. In what is widely believed to have been a Blair government cover-up, Lord Hutton, in his official report, concluded that Kelly committed suicide in a wooded area near his Oxfordshire home using a dull knife to cut his left wrist and ingesting 29 over-the-counter analgesic tablets.
snip
On March 9, 2005, Costas Tsalikidis, the Vodaphone telecommunications expert who discovered the U.S. eavesdropping system in Athens in early 2005, was found by his mother hanging from a rope in his apartment. There was no suicide note.
snip
After returning from their August holiday, French Socialist presidential candidate Ségolène Royal and her partner, French Socialist Party Secretary General Francois Hollande, discovered that their Paris apartment had been broken into and ransacked. Although nothing was stolen, Royal and Hollande reported the break-in to police. Royal also suspects that wiretaps were placed on her phone lines. After reporting the break-in, Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy, France's leading neo-con and candidate for the right-wing UMP party in next year's presidential election, leaked the break-in story to the press, angering Royal and Hollande.
waynemadsenreport.com