Norman Baker was suspicious about the "official story" of David Kelly's death
from the start. He subsequently resigned from the front bench of the Liberal
Democrats in Parliament to pursue the matter. This book is the result. He
makes a very strong case that Kelly's death was not suicide, and that the
Hutton inquiry was essentially a cover-up, which denied the due process which
a proper inquest (which never took place) would have provided. He was in
contact during his investigations with various shadowy figures who claimed to
know the truth: to what extent their testimony can be relied on is unclear.
What does seem clear is that Kelly was murdered: the question then is who
benefitted from his death.
Buy it from Amazon (UK)
|