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BBC
The Conspiracy Files - 9/11
Background and
main links page to the BBC's
notorious 9/11 documentary.
On 18th
February 2007, BBC2 television screened a documentary "The Conspiracy Files - 9/11,"* which was a pre-planned destructive
analysis of the 9/11 Truth
movement in the U.S. The program concluded by agreeing with the fraudulent
official U.S. version of
events of that day. As a consequence of this negative bias the
writer sent a formal letter of complaint to the BBC. Please follow the
links below to read the correspondence:
* Copies of the original full documentary The Conspiracy
Files - 9/11 were available on GoogleVideo and YouTube until a few weeks
after 18th February. As the videos have been withdrawn it must be assumed
that the BBC used their pressure to have them removed. Such is their
integrity and sense of fare play!
1.
28th
February 2007. Formal letter of complaint to the BBC.
2.
2nd
March 2007. The BBC's reply, (and enclosing blog messages from Richard Porter and
Mike Rudin.)
The BBC's reply was condescending
and dismissive, and failed to answer the statements and questions
in the letter. Thereupon a formal complaint was sent to Ofcom about the
BBC. (Ofcom is the
independent regulator and competition authority for the UK communications
industries, with responsibilities across television, radio,
telecommunications and wireless communications services.)
3.
19th March 2007 - formal
letter of complaint to Ofcom
about BBC.
After the BBC's
supportive documentary of the fraudulent official U.S. government version
of 9/11, researchers in America unearthed BBC World News TV footage
broadcast on September 11th 2001, which stated
that building 7 had already collapsed 23 minutes before its actual
collapse. This showed that BBC news of the events were being directed by
third-party sources with pre-scripted information. The BBC's letter denied
this. Thereupon the writer sent a separate complaint to Ofcom about that
news program and the BBC's subsequent denial that it was receiving
pre-scripted news of the event.
4.
20th March 2007 - formal complaint to Ofcom about BBC World
News program of 11th September 2001.
5.
22nd March 2007 - addendum to letter of 20th March
2007 sent to Ofcom.
6.
23rd
March 2007 - letter from Ofcom.
The reply letter from Ofcom informed
that the complaint should be sent to the BBC Governors.
7.
26th
March 2007 - Formal letter of complaint to the BBC Governors.
8.
24th
April 2007 - BBC's reply to letter to Governors of 26th March 2007.
9.
30th May 2007 - Formal letter of complaint to BBC
Editorial Complaints Unit.
10.
18th June 2007 - BBC reply from Editorial Complaints
Unit (9 pages).
11.
3rd
August 2007 - BBC Trust reply.
12.
20th November 2007 - Letter to BBC
Trust, Chairman, Editorial Standards Committee.
13.
21st November 2007 - Addendum to
Letter to BBC Trust, Chairman, Editorial Standards
Committee.
Note:
23rd April 2007. That the BBC chose to release
another shorter version, with new footage, of The Conspiracy Files - 9/11,
lasting just 21 minutes:
http://video.google.co.uk/videoplay?docid=-435692623160264857
dated 23rd April 2007, must indicate agitation, guilt, regret or sheer
bloody-mindedness at the furore concerning its original production on 18th
February 2007.
News update: The BBC aired a new documentary on
BBC4 on 3rd June 2007 at 8.0pm with the same title: "The
Conspiracy Files: 9/11 Showing as part of
Conspiracy USA week. This programme examined some of the growing number of
conspiracy theories surrounding the attacks of 9/11. Includes observations
from eyewitnesses."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcfour/listings/programme.shtml?
day=sunday&filename=20070603/20070603_2000_4544_4016_60&service_id=4544
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