The BBC has admitted that a Radio 4 documentary on an alleged chemical weapon attack in Syria contained serious inaccuracies. The Corporation's Executive Complaints Unit (ECU) upheld a protest from Mail on Sunday columnist Peter Hitchens following last November's broadcast of Mayday: The Canister On The Bed. Last week – nearly ten months after the broadcast – the ECU delivered its finding that the BBC was wrong to insinuate that 'Alex' was motivated to go public about his doubts over the attack by the prospect of a $100,000 (£72,000) reward from the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks. No such reward was ever paid, according to WikiLeaks.
The BBC also accepted it had no evidence to back up its claim that 'Alex', a highly qualified and apolitical scientist, believed the attack in Douma, which prompted retaliatory missile strikes by Britain, the US and France, had been staged.
And these are the kind of lies that led directly to people dying in bombing attacks on Syria.
Take a closer look at that interesting statue right over the doorway:
WTF, a bearded man holding a naked kid!!! Perfectly innocent, surely?
Yes, that's a flute the kid is holding, read into that what you like.
Gill was as weird as they come. Indeed, he was something of a trailblazer for the contemporary Left, which shares a lot of his proclivities.
He is on record as having an incestuous relationship with his own sister and two of his daughters, and did so when they were still children.
And if that's not enough for you, he even sexually abused or possibly raped the family dog.
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