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MoD lied for 40 years that irradiated British troops had a “zero dose”

For 40 years, the Ministry of Defence has been clear about the reason for Kenneth Measures’ loss of life from a uncommon kind of lung most cancers.

A letter written in February 1984 by a junior minister informed his household: “The information from the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment shows Mr Measures received a zero radiation dose from the United Kingdom nuclear tests.”

Now the Mirror can reveal proof that the official line is a part of a cover-up, wherein hundreds of households, inquests and court docket hearings, have been misled, to disclaim a multi-million pound legal responsibility.

The reality is that British and Commonwealth troops had been intentionally uncovered to the equal of as much as 800 dental x-rays in only a day throughout Cold War radiation experiments – dramatically elevating their danger of most cancers.





Nuclear veteran Kenneth Measures pictured smiling in his uniform before being posted to Christmas Island
Nuke vet Kenneth Measures pictured in his navy uniform, in an image he despatched house to sweetheart Valerie with the inscription “your ever-loving Ken”




Kenneth's sweetheart Valerie, who later became his wife and fought to get his death investigated
Valerie additionally served in navy, however later took on the MoD in a futile battle to show it had brought on the most cancers which killed Ken

Kenneth, of Helston, Cornwall, was simply 54 when he died on the finish of 1983. It had been 36 years since he had adopted orders to witness 4 nuclear bombs, with a mixed yield 200 instances that of the atomic blast which flattened Hiroshima.

A pathologist famous at his put up mortem that secondary tumours had grown on his backbone, and that he had wasted away to virtually nothing.

His widow Valerie didn’t consider her fighting-fit husband, whose job had been to service the helicopters flying out and in of Ground Zero, would have contracted the illness had he not been irradiated.

His kind of most cancers, adenocarcinoma of the lung, isn’t seen in anybody so younger, and may be attributable to radiation publicity.





The letter from a junior defence minister to Valerie's MP, insisting Ken had a "zero radiation dose"
The letter from a junior defence minister to Valerie’s MP, insisting Ken had a “zero radiation dose”

Valerie battled for years, fought for an inquest, and badgered the coroner’s officer to have her husband’s physique examined for radiation. She wrote to her MP and demanded solutions, however bought again the official line from the MoD that, based on the atomic scientists accountable for the data, Ken had a “zero radiation dose”.

“She just hit a brick wall, and in the end it made her mentally and physically ill. The inquest came back saying natural causes. She got depression, and it was decided that it was better to just shelve it,” mentioned daughter Melanie.

“She put all my dad’s stuff in a box and put it away. A few years ago she was diagnosed with dementia, and when we applied for dad’s nuclear test medal on her behalf we showed it to her, but she didn’t really know what it was. She died just before Christmas, and she never did find out the truth.”





Kenneth and Valerie, pictured on their wedding day
Kenneth and Valerie, pictured on their marriage ceremony day

Around 22,000 servicemen took half in bomb checks in Australia and the Pacific between 1952 and 1967. Most had been ordered to look at explosions, and reside close to Ground Zero. Others had been ordered to fly, sail, and crawl by means of fallout in horrifying experiments.

The Ministry of Defence admits that simply 23% of them had been monitored for radiation. They got a badge constituted of digicam movie, which might be developed to detect publicity.

The outcomes – claiming virtually two-thirds of them had a ‘zero dose’ – have been relied upon by the MoD ever since to reject struggle pensions, block wrongful loss of life rulings from coroners, and to defeat compensation lawsuits.

As Valerie started asking questions, different wives and veterans had been doing the identical. In September 1984, the Mirror’s sister paper the Sunday People launched a entrance web page investigation into ‘Our Atom Bomb Kids’, and demanded motion.





'Our Atom Bomb Kids' front page investigation in the Sunday People, September 1984
‘Our Atom Bomb Kids’ entrance web page investigation within the Sunday People, September 1984




Ken pictured at work. He was based on aircraft carriers and also at Royal Naval Air Station Culdrose
Ken pictured at work. He was based mostly on plane carriers and in addition at Royal Naval Air Station Culdrose

The scandal exploded, and Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was compelled into ordering a scientific research of the veterans’ deaths from the National Radiological Protection Board. In Parliament, she insisted: “No special measures to monitor the long-term health of military personnel were taken, because the radiation exposure records indicated that they had not been exposed to any significant health hazard.”

But the scientists found the data had been bogus. That damning reality was by no means made public when a abstract of their analysis was introduced in 1988, 5 years after Ken died. Instead, it was hidden in a 140-page “description of methodology” that was referenced in a footnote.

This shadow report was given an ISBN quantity, however the Stationary Office confirmed not a single copy was ever printed or bought, and veterans campaigning on the time by no means knew about it.

It states the badge knowledge was collected by atomic scientists and summarised within the Sixties, and the badges destroyed. When it was shared 20 years later with the NRPB, they had been informed the one notes made had been from badges exhibiting above the “minimum recordable level” – which stored altering.





An excerpt from the unpublished report, showing that "zero doses" could have included doses equivalent to between 100 and 800 dental x-rays
An excerpt from the unpublished report, exhibiting that “zero doses” may have included doses equal to between 100 and 800 dental x-rays

Their report says: “At the end of the test programme in the 1960s the minimum recordable level was 0.1 miliSievert, but the normal figure in Australia was 0.2 mSv, though, on occasions, 0.3 mSv or 0.5 mSv were used.”

A dental x-ray entails 0.005 mSv of radiation, and even that low dose can enhance the danger of most cancers. It signifies that servicemen who acquired the equal of 100 such x-rays in a single day would have been recorded as a “zero dose”.

The report goes on to say that at Operation Buffalo, a 1956 human experiment in Australia wherein officers had been ordered to stroll, crawl and run by means of fallout to see how a lot caught to their uniforms, “the minimum recordable level was 4 mSv”, on account of poor-quality badges.

More than 200 officers may have been uncovered to the equal of 800 x-rays, and would nonetheless be recorded as having zero radiation. According to official figures, greater than 70 per cent of those that took half in Buffalo later developed tumours. As the badges had been all destroyed 60 years in the past, it’s inconceivable to to re-examine them and ensure the readings.





Ken in a picture he sent home from Christmas Island, with he and his shipmates swimming the sea between bomb blasts
Ken in an image he despatched house from Christmas Island, with he and his shipmates swimming the ocean between bomb blasts

Records “can no longer be relied on”, says MP

Campaigners are calling for a evaluate of the false badge knowledge.

Tory grandee Sir John Hayes mentioned: “These records must now be urgently reviewed, as they can no longer relied on by the MoD to defend its claim to have done right by these men. We know there is no safe limit for radiation, and therefore any dose – no matter how small – could have had devastating consequences.”

Rishi Sunak promised to satisfy veterans in 2022, however has since mentioned he’s too busy. Repeated requests to his workplace to debate the problems have been ignored.

Alan Owen, who based marketing campaign group Labrats, added: “The MoD has relied on lies, and wasted millions, just to refuse veterans a small pension.

“We know that all war pension claims are still checked against this dodgy data, and if it says zero the pension gets thrown out. The MoD has known for 40 years the whole thing was bogus, and thousands have been affected. The time for lies is over.”

In repeated authorities research, researchers couldn’t clarify why veterans who had been recorded having low doses confirmed excessive charges of most cancers. The MoD claimed the illness will need to have been attributable to likelihood, and by no means admitted the recorded dose is likely to be mistaken.

We particularly requested the MoD to touch upon whether or not it thought of the dose badge data to be dependable or not.

A spokesman responded: “We are grateful to all service personnel who participated in the British nuclear testing programme and contributed to keeping our nation secure and are pleased that they will now be receiving a medal in recognition. Nuclear test veterans who believe they have suffered ill health due to service have the right to apply for no-fault compensation under the War Pensions Scheme.”

Kenneth’s service, with the Royal Navy aboard plane service HMS Warrior and the tank touchdown ship HMS Narvik, was at Operation Grapple, held in 1957 and 1958 at Christmas Island within the Pacific.

The NRPB has discovered Kenneth and his comrades had a 28% elevated danger of lung most cancers – and solely a handful had been ever given a dose badge.

There had been additionally Whitehall orders that navy crews at Grapple ought to have blood checks taken, which might have been extra correct, however the outcomes have by no means been discovered. At the time of Kenneth’s loss of life, a lot of those that had carried out the work had been alive, nonetheless working at AWRE, and out there for questioning.

Yet at his inquest, a “government scientist” referred to as to offer proof refused to offer any particulars, past claiming that no helicopters had been contaminated and any fallout Ken had ingested would have “decayed rapidly within the body”. He didn’t inform the coroner that the “zero dose” is likely to be mistaken.





How the Mirror reported the inquest at the time
How the Mirror reported the inquest on the time

Valerie vowed afterwards: “I will fight on, and investigate in my own quiet way. There must be something there… there was a lot not said, a lot that could not be said.”

But by the point the 1988 report was lastly uncovered, and the blood testing found, Valerie had superior dementia. She died aged 94, having spent longer as a widow than she did as a spouse.

“Luckily my sister and I were born before he went to the tests, so we didn’t have the birth defects other families have been afflicted by,” mentioned Melanie, of Kirkcaldy, Fife. “What mattered to my mum is the way people were treated, not just with the lack of information but being brushed off like they were nobody. Just like the Post Office, just like all the other scandals.”

The final bomb Kenneth noticed, codenamed Grapple X, was Britain’s first thermonuclear weapon, and its explosion assured our place on the earth.

He and his comrades knew nothing of the dangers, and had been informed we needed to have The Bomb to be secure – they usually had religion the federal government would hold them secure in return.

Melanie mentioned: “I just want the truth to come out. My dad was so proud of being in the navy, and serving the Queen. Yet when he needed help there was none.”