Johnny Green / APBritain's Ministry of Defense
scientist David Kelly is seen in London. |
Family gathers for British weapons adviser's funeral
ASSOCIATED PRESS
LONGWORTH, England, Aug. 6 — Family and friends of government weapons expert David Kelly bade farewell at a private
funeral service Wednesday, blocking the attention that made Kelly so uncomfortable in his last days.
Kelly, who had been suspected as the source of a British Broadcasting Corp. report that raised questions about the
government's case for war in Iraq, killed himself last month at the edge of woodland near his Oxfordshire village.
The BBC subsequently confirmed Kelly was its source for the report, which provoked heated denials and an intense ''mole hunt''
by Prime Minister Tony Blair's government.
Heeding the Kelly family's wish for a private funeral, police turned media away at the edge of the village, and no details of
the service were released. However, journalist Tom Mangold, a friend of Kelly, later briefed reporters.
''We are here because of the tragedy that has taken place. We are not here for the media, or to make a political statement,
or to apportion blame,'' Mangold quoted the minister, the Rev. Roy Woodhams, as telling the congregation.
Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott represented the government at the service, and Lord Hutton, the senior judge appointed to
investigate Kelly's death, also attended.
Mangold described the service as ''quiet,'' adding: ''It was gentle and in every way reflected the man.'' Though mainly
Christian, there was a prayer from the Baha'i faith which Kelly had embraced in recent years.
The funeral came a day after one of Blair's spokesmen apologized for suggesting that Kelly may have been a ''Walter Mitty''
fantasist.
The BBC said Kelly was the source for a May 29 report quoting an unidentified source as suggesting the government had ignored
expert advice in claiming Iraq could deploy chemical and biological weapons on 45 minutes notice.
That claim was included in an intelligence dossier released by the government in September, and formed a key part of Blair's
case for military action to deal with Iraq's weapons of mass destruction.
Pressure on Blair has grown since the fall of Saddam Hussein as occupying forces have found no evidence of such weapons.
Hutton's inquiry formally opened Friday, but gets down to work in earnest next week. The judge said he intends to call Blair
and Defense Secretary Geoff Hoon to testify.
One aspect of Hutton's inquiry is the role played by the government in publicly suggesting Kelly was the source of the BBC
story, which led to Kelly testifying before a House of Commons committee.
Kelly denied being the source, and said he had never suggested as the BBC reporter later alleged his then-anonymous
source had that Blair's communications director, Alastair Campbell, was including dubious assertions in the dossier.
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