Skip to content or view screen version

Hoaxed Inquiries

Ben | 13.05.2004 11:45 | Analysis | Liverpool | London

How the public will never get an objective understanding of its own mistakes.

It seems that the British legal system and more recently the Ministry of Defence (MoD) seem to have forgotten the prognosis of unethical bias that exists in carrying out investigations into your own institution.
The MoD is conducting an investigation to cast light on the authenticity of the Daily Mirror’s photographs which allegedly are of British soldiers abusing Iraq prisoners.

Today however, Lord Hutton announced that he “rejects” the claims that his report was a whitewash favouring the Government, he claimed he had "reflected" on claims it was a "whitewash" but "was still of the view that I was right".

The governments internal “Butler inquiry”, intended to quell the criticism of Hutton’s report into the government is yet another example of internal bias that every institution investigating its own faults will meet.

Surely if you intend to examine evidence within the confines of your own resources, whether they are MoD laboratories or a legal system governed by close friends to the government, the results of your investigation are going to be affected by your own association, let alone your own personal bias towards that institution.

Yet, not in defence of the Daily Mirrors photographs, the evidence does largely suggest that they are fake, yet that’s not the issue; the issue is whether and why institutions in the UK can get away with conducting investigations into allegations aimed at themselves and provide evidence to the contrary. Then this evidence provided is accepted as read by fifty percent of the public or hailed as a ‘whitewash’; only, its got a legal stamp and been proved in a court of law so cannot be disapproved.

The other explanation is that the MoD and the government have something to hide. If this weren’t true there would be nothing to stop other institutions being allowed access to the investigation techniques that MoD will employ this Thursday.

The Butler Inquiry is due to be completed and its results not even available for public inspection, indicating that the government can escape from criticism untarnished, yet again.

This proves, that the UK lacks an independent inquiry bureau, an establishment that should exist, to provide balanced reports into the affairs of government and other major institutions. This is must be brought about as it appears, such institutions can no longer be trusted to administer themselves and provide objective criticism of its own handling of events.

Ben
- e-mail: mcabromb@livjm.ac.uk

Comments

Display the following 2 comments

  1. Culture of Secrecy — Timbo
  2. Operation Broken Mirror. — Martin