| Author | Topic: Mystery of UN IAEA Expert's 'Suicide' Plunge (Read 172 times) |
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|  | Mystery of UN IAEA Expert's 'Suicide' Plunge « Thread Started on Nov 1, 2009, 8:37pm » | |
I read in the Daily Mail today that British nuclear expert’s 17th floor UN death plunge ‘was not suicide’. The article tells that this man whose job involved monitoring nuclear activity, and had a wife who worked as well for the UN nuclear agency IAEA, and a 3 year old son together, was originally thought to have committed suicide by ascending to the 17th floor of the UN office building where he worked in Austria and plunged to his death. Since his family thought it very strange that he would have committed suicide, as 'he was not that type', requested another doctor perform a second post mortem. The result was that this doctor suspected suspicious circumstances.
The Daily Mirror also carries this story and tells too of a Brit who died in similar circumstances in the same building 4 months ago, but I could find no further verification of this, although the Telegraph too mentioned this as reported by other UN workers there.
The Mail however tells of another similar case - Under a year ago, an American died at the IAEA in strikingly similar circumstances, his body being found at the bottom of a stairwell.
Consider that both had 'chosen' to plunge to their deaths on the inside of the building, and had been found at the bottom of the stairwell. If I was planning suicide I would be afraid to hit the side of the stairwell on the way down and merely injure myself so I'd choose the scenic route.
Consider too, that the recent plunge happened on the same day that the BBC reports Iran nuclear fuel deal 'agreed' . These talks were held in the same building of this apparent 'suicide'.  Now is that a coincidence or not?
I can say that I trust the UN and IAEA as much as I trust the BBC - which is NOT AT ALL. Bear in mind that it was Hans Blix who headed this organisation during the beginning of Saddam's nuclear exploits, and who confirmed to the world that Iraq was clean. That was until Israel bombed the Osiris reactor and showed the IAEA up for the sham it was. But the IAEA was happy to use Blix again in the lead up to the present Iraq conflict and deposition of Saddam.
So I looked to research a little more on these apparent 'suicides at the UN. I found this one of an Austrian UN woman who also apparently dived to her death from the 19th floor of the UN building in NY as reported by the Daily News . Delving further I discovered she also had IAEA connections.
Maria DiBiase WMR has learned from UN sources that the 19th Floor from which UN employee Maria DiBiase plunged to her death in the early morning of February 17, houses the Department of Peace-keeping Operations/Field Administration and Logistics Division (DPKO/FALD). The offices also house the code machines used for the encrypted fax machines used for DPKO activities in addition to a spare set of code machines used for DPKO rapid response teams. DiBiase, an Austrian national, was a computer specialist for the UN and a former Conference Services staff member of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in Vienna, Austria. WMR has learned that the UN Special Commission (UNSCOM) maintained in a special UN's computer database all the files on Sadaam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction program retrieved from compact disks provided to UNSCOM by Saddam's government prior to the U.S. invasion of Iraq. The database is said to include all the black market nuclear suppliers involved in providing materials to Iraq, Iran, Pakistan, and Libya via Turkey and the A Q Khan smuggling network. The list reportedly includes front companies in Switzerland linked to Marc Rich, the American fugitive pardoned by President Clinton, and Dick Cheney. DiBiase is said to have arrived at work Sunday morning to finish a project that was due on Monday morning. WMR has been told that there may have been a "black bag" operation taking place on the 19th floor at the same time DiBiase arrived at work. The UNSCOM files reportedly validate much of former FBI translator Sibel Edmonds' recent claims on nuclear smuggling that appeared in the London Sunday Times.
Something stinks - really stinks.
Did I mention that the BBC carries no coverage of any of these deaths? But it reports in glowing terms the highly suspicious deal done by the IAEA with Iran (linked above).
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|  | Re: Mystery of UN IAEA Expert's 'Suicide' Plunge « Reply #1 on Nov 7, 2009, 12:56am » | |
Reading this story today: I ran 'tested advanced nuclear warhead design', it struck me that perhaps there was a connection between this and the story above. Not least because documentation from the highly secret dossier describing Iran's nuclear capability was leaked to the Guardian.

It also transpires that the Iran nuclear fuel deal 'agreed' as reported by the BBC was not agreed to by Iran, which carries on giving the world by way of the IAEA, the run around.
Could it be that the one who leaked this dossier to the Guardian ended up lying at the bottom of a stairwell, or have I been watching too many spy movies? Fact can be stranger than fiction.
Curiouser and Curiouser...
Quote:I ran 'tested advanced nuclear warhead design' The United Nations nuclear watchdog has demanded that Iran explain evidence indicating that its scientists have experimented with the design of an advanced nuclear warhead, it emerged last night. By Our Foreign Staff Published: 12:14AM GMT 06 Nov 2009
According to leaked documentation from a dossier compiled by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), Iranian scientists may have tested high-explosive components of the design of a secret technology known as a "two-point implosion" device.
The technology can enable the building of warheads that are simpler and smaller than older ones. By reducing the size of warheads, it is easier to put them on a missile.
Documentation from the dossier, entitled "Possible Military Dimensions of Iran's Nuclear Program" and leaked to The Guardian, refers to experiments testing a two-point detonation design.
The information was partly drawn from reports submitted to the IAEA by Western intelligence agencies. It is part of the evidence of nuclear weaponisation collated by the IAEA that has been presented to Iran for its response.
In the past, the IAEA has regarded such information from Western intelligence agencies with scepticism, particularly since the Iraq war and the faulty reporting of the existence of weapons of mass destruction.
But Mohamed ElBaradei, the IAEA's director general, has said the evidence of Iranian weaponisation "appears to have been derived from multiple sources over different periods of time, appears to be generally consistent, and is sufficiently comprehensive and detailed that it needs to be addressed by Iran".
Some extracts from the dossier had already been made public but it had not been known that it had contained documentation about such an advanced warhead.
"It is breathtaking that Iran could be working on this sort of material," a European government adviser on nuclear issues told The Guardian.
Details of the documents have emerged amid tension over Iran's rejection of a deal that would remove most of its enriched uranium stockpile for a year and replace it with nuclear fuel rods that would be more difficult to turn into weapons.
Tehran has also rejected negotiations, were due to start last week, over its uranium enrichment programme, which is in breach of UN Security Council resolutions.
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|  | Re: Mystery of UN IAEA Expert's 'Suicide' Plunge « Reply #2 on Nov 22, 2009, 9:43pm » | |
The Plot Thickens!
This report in the Daily Mail today tells that the sister of the man who the Austrian authorities want to claim commited suicide, saved his clothes from being burnt by those authorities, and also notes that a second autopsy showed bruises on the neck not consistent with his fall.
Still no mention of this on the BBC website, which suggests some collusion, otherwise why isn't it being reported? Can the heads of the BBC hierarchy be so far up the backsides of the UN that they will fail to cover the possible murder by them of a British subject?
Quote:Sister of UN 'suicide' scientist who died in mysterious fall rescues potential evidence from destruction By Daniel Boffey
The sister of a British scientist who died in a mysterious fall has told how she rescued potential evidence from being destroyed by police.
Beverley Hall, 49, said she has been forced to store the clothes her brother wore on the night he died after officers revealed they were due to be burned.
She is now campaigning for police to investigate properly the death of Timothy Hampton, who plunged from the 17th floor of a UN building in Vienna last month.
Austrian detectives have insisted that Mr Hampton, a 47-year-old scientist involved in monitoring nuclear activity, committed suicide.
But Mrs Hall, who runs a caravan park in Newbury, Berkshire, believes there is enough evidence – including signs of bruising around her brother’s neck consistent with strangulation – to suggest he did not kill himself.
Last night, Richard Benyon, the family’s MP, said Mrs Hall had brought her brother’s possessions to the UK to prevent police from destroying them.
He said: ‘She was in Vienna and was told that the clothes were going to be burned, destroyed. So she has had to bring the clothes back to the UK in sealed bags. They are sitting in her house.
‘One would think that in such circumstances the clothes would be kept by the authorities but not in this case. Beverley said she felt like screaming in conversations with the authorities. I am getting increasingly concerned.’
Mr Hampton, a father of one, was found dead at the bottom of a stairwell in Vienna at around 8pm on October 20.
An initial post-mortem examination concluded there were ‘no suspicious circumstances’ surrounding his death.
But his widow Olena Gryshcuk and her family were unhappy with that verdict and a second examination undertaken on their behalf found bruising ‘not consistent with a fall’.
One theory the family want the authorities to examine is that Mr Hampton, who worked for the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty Organisation, was carried to the 17th floor from his workplace on the sixth floor and thrown to his death.
It is understood they are also concerned that the Austrian authorities and the UN have been reluctant to treat with the death as suspicious.
Mr Benyon said: ‘Mr Hampton’s former colleagues are terrified and no one is working late like they used to. Morale is very low.
‘Beverley presented the evidence of the second autopsy but the authorities still insisted that there was nothing to suggest anything but suicide.’
Mr Benyon said he had raised the matter with Foreign Office Minister Chris Bryant, who was applying pressure on the authorities through the British Embassy in Vienna.
CNTBTO staff monitor tremors worldwide to uncover illegal nuclear tests. The UN has denied claims Mr Hampton may have been involved in talks discussing nuclear testing in Iran.
An Austrian police spokesman refused to comment on the case but said that possessions were burned only when they were no longer relevant to an inquiry.
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