Thatcher - security gone mad!

I work right next door to the Tower of London, and my daughter asked me to take a couple of photos of the cannons that were going to be fired off at minute intervals during Thatcher's procession.  Methinks no problem, so I approach one of the Beefeaters to ask him what time the cannons will fire, and am rather surprised to find all gates are shut.


"You won't be able to get access to the waterside until twelve-o-clock until after the cannons have fired and they have been removed."  Disappointed I ask why.


"Security, of course.  We want to avoid all trouble."  St Pauls Cathedral is about two miles away as the crow flies!  I pointed this out, but he was adamant.  By coincidence, an American tourist approached. 


"What time do the boat trips start?"


"Not until twelve-o-clock, for security reasons, after the service."


"What the heck has that got to do with it?"  He asked.  The answer?  This'll really slay you:-D


"In case somebody carries out a mortar bomb attack on the police, using a pleasure craft as a launch pad."  YOU COULDN'T MAKE IT UP!!! :^O:^O:^O This American guy nearly dropped his camera, laughing so much.

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Re: Thatcher - security gone mad!

Speaking of Mortar attacks ,


 


Seems a provisional IRA bomb maker responsible for designing & building their successful one, has come out of retirement and is now working for Dissident Republicans


 


 


http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/local-national/northern-ireland/new-terrorist-alliance-brings-provisional-ira-bomb-maker-out-of-retirement-29179974.html


 


 



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Jack Straw repealed all the Death Penalty sentences mentioned in Freds post


 



  • 1998. The Criminal Justice Bill of July 31st, removed High Treason and piracy with violence as capital crimes, thus effectively ending capital punishment.

  • 1999. On the 27th of January the Home Secretary (Jack Straw) formally signed the 6th protocol of the European Convention of Human Rights in Strasbourg, on behalf of the British government formally abolishing the death penalty in the UK. It had been still theoretically available for treason and piracy up to 1998 but it was extremely unlikely that even if anyone had been convicted of these crimes over the preceding 30 years, that they would have actually been executed.

  •  

  • Successive Home Secretaries had always reprieved persons sentenced to death in the Channel Islands and Isle of Man where the death sentence for murder could still be passed and the Royal Prerogative was observed.


 


 


 

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