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7/7 families will see MI5 officer

The bus bombed in Tavistock SquareSuicide bombers killed 52 victims and injured more than 700 people on public transport in 2005

A “very senior” MI5 officer will give evidence at the inquests for the 7/7 bombings after a ruling by the coroner.

Lady Justice Hallett granted a request from Home Secretary Theresa May for “Witness G” to appear with anonymity.

However, the coroner refused to rule that the witness should be screened from the families of those who died in the terrorist attacks on 7 July 2005.

Witness G will give evidence on whether the attacks on public transport in London could have been prevented.

Lady Hallett told the hearings at the Royal Courts of Justice in London: “The bereaved families have been waiting over five years to see this witness or a witness from the security service give evidence.

“The issue of preventability is exceedingly important to them. It has been at the heart of most of their submissions to me ever since my appointment as coroner.”

Lady Hallett said she was confident that it would make a “considerable difference” to the bereaved families to be able to see the witness give evidence “rather than hear the evidence come from a disembodied voice”.

In the attacks, four suicide bombers detonated homemade devices on Tube trains at Aldgate, Edgware Road and Russell Square, and on a double decker bus at Tavistock Square. They killed 52 victims and more than 700 people were injured.

The inquests are expected to last until March.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘Bloodgate’ physio in appeal win

Steph Brennan and Tom WilliamsSteph Brennan (left) has had his dismissal quashed
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Former Harlequins physiotherapist Steph Brennan has won a court appeal against his dismissal for his role in rugby union’s “bloodgate” scandal.

Mr Brennan’s lawyers accused the Health Professions Council (HPC) of unlawfully imposing a two-year ban for helping winger Tom Williams fake an injury.

It was dubbed “bloodgate” after the player bit into a fake blood capsule

Mr Justice Ouseley, sitting at the High Court, quashed his dismissal and ordered the HPC to reconsider the case.

Mr Brennan’s lawyer, Paul Harris, argued that the HPC had adopted a “one strike and you are out for good” approach and the physio’s ban was of “gross severity”.

Mr Harris argued in court: “We do say that Mr Brennan does merit sanction, but the issue here is the gross severity of one strike and you are out for life. It is a sanction of last resort.”

But Stephen Brassington, for the HPC, said the misconduct “was so egregious and damaging to the reputation of his profession that the only appropriate way to deal with it was striking-off”.

He said: “His [Mr Brennan’s] expressions of remorse and sorrow simply were too little too late.”

The HPC’s lawyer argued that the panel’s order was not open to legal challenge.

Mr Brennan admitted helping Williams fake an injury during Harlequins’ Heineken Cup quarter-final defeat by Leinster in April 2009.

The supposed injury allowed the club to replace the player with a specialist goal-kicker in the last few minutes of the game.

He admitted in total five instances of faking blood injuries, between the rugby club’s 2005-06 season and the 2009 game.

He said on three occasions he had provided players with fake blood capsules for their welfare and the fourth time to get a player on to the pitch after a team-mate had been sent to the sin-bin.

Tom Williams was initially barred from the game for 12 months, a ban reduced to four months after he admitted using the capsule.

The then director of rugby at Harlequins, Dean Richards, was banned by the European Rugby Cup for three years and the club was fined £259,000.

Mr Brennan was due to begin work with the Rugby Football Union as an England physio before this incident. Since the ban was imposed in September he has carried on working in private practice.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.