Britain’s MI5
security service covered up for pedophile members of the UK government
under then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher to avoid political
embarrassment, local media reported Thursday, citing a recently unsealed
trove of Cabinet files.
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The documents, reportedly found among unsorted papers
stored by the Cabinet Office, indicate that in 1986 head of MI5 at that
time Antony Duff informed Cabinet Secretary Robert Armstrong that an
unnamed senior Tory lawmaker had a "penchant for small boys," the Times
newspaper reported.
Duff wrote that they had accepted the parliamentarian’s denial on the grounds that "the risks of political embarrassment to the government is rather greater than the security danger," the letter continued.
Sky News cited a spokesman from a children rights lobby group, the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSCC), who said the disclosure showed how people at the highest levels of government "simply weren't thinking about crimes against children."
Duff wrote that they had accepted the parliamentarian’s denial on the grounds that "the risks of political embarrassment to the government is rather greater than the security danger," the letter continued.
The government admitted the existence of the papers after months of requests from Sky News, a British TV station. The station had named several key Westminster figures who were
allegedly embroiled in the child sexual abuse scandal. These included
Thatcher's Parliamentary Private Secretary Peter Morrison, Home
Secretary Leon Brittan, diplomat Sir Peter Hayman and Northern Ireland
minister William van Straubenzee. All four have since passed away.
Sky News cited a spokesman from a children rights lobby group, the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSCC), who said the disclosure showed how people at the highest levels of government "simply weren't thinking about crimes against children."
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