-Caveat Lector-

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/politics/3076801.stm

Last Updated: Friday, 18 July, 2003, 16:13 GMT 17:13 UK
Body 'matches' Iraq expert

A body matching the description of Dr David Kelly - the weapons expert at
the centre of the Iraq dossier row - has been found at a beauty spot close
to his home in Oxfordshire.

The government says an independent judicial inquiry will be held into the
circumstances of his death if the body is confirmed to be that of the MoD
adviser.

The discovery was made at 0920 BST by a member of the police team searching
for Dr Kelly in a wooded area at Harrowdown Hill, near Faringdon.

Dr Kelly, 59, had been caught up in a row between the BBC and the government
about the use of intelligence reports in the run-up to the war with Iraq.

On Tuesday he told the Foreign Affairs select committee he had spoken to BBC
reporter Andrew Gilligan but denied he was the main source for a story about
claims that a dossier on Iraq had been "sexed up".

Dr Kelly left his home in Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxfordshire, at about 1500
BST on Thursday and his family reported him missing at 2345 BST the same
day.

The body was found lying on the ground, around five miles from Dr Kelly's
home, a police spokeswoman said.

Acting superintendent Dave Purnell said formal identification would take
place on Saturday and the case was being treated as an "unexplained death".

"We will be awaiting the results of the post mortem and also waiting while
the forensic examination continues at the scene at Harrowdown Hill," he
added.

Attention

The government announcement of an inquiry if the body is Dr Kelly's came
from the prime minister's plane as he flew for a visit to Tokyo

Mr Blair's spokesman said: "The prime minister is obviously very distressed
for the family.

"If it is Dr Kelly's body, the Ministry of Defence will hold an independent
judicial inquiry into the circumstances leading up to his death."

Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith said Mr Blair should consider cutting short
his trip to the Far East.

Robert Jackson, the Conservative MP in whose constituency Dr Kelly lived,
said the "responsibility of the BBC should not go unmentioned" in the case.

"The pressure was significantly increased by the fact the BBC refused to
make it clear he was not the source," he said.

A BBC spokesman said: "We are shocked and saddened to hear what has happened
and we extend our deepest sympathies to Dr Kelly's family and friends.

Shock

"Whilst Dr Kelly's family await the formal identification, it would not be
appropriate for us to make any further statement."

Earlier this week, Dr Kelly denied being the BBC's main source for the story
claiming Downing Street had "sexed up" the dossier about Iraqi weapons of
mass destruction.

MPs on the Commons foreign affairs committee, which questioned Dr Kelly
earlier this week, reacted with shock and disbelief at news of his
disappearance.

Huge media attention has been on Dr Kelly since the Ministry of Defence said
he had come forward to admit meeting Andrew Gilligan, the BBC correspondent
behind the controversial Iraq story.

Mr Gilligan said a source had told him that the dossier on Iraq had been
"transformed" by Downing Street.

The BBC correspondent has refused to name his source, but the MoD said Dr
Kelly had come forward to say it may have been him.

Sensitive

Government ministers have said they believe he was the source for Mr
Gilligan's story.

Supt Purnell said a police family liaison officer is with Dr Kelly's family.
The official and wife Janice have three daughters, Sian, 32, and twins
Rachel and Ellen, 30.

Ann Lewis, a neighbour of Dr Kelly, told BBC News Online she was
"devastated" for his family, especially his children.

She said: "He was a quiet man. He was a man who showed great care and
concern for others."

Craig Foster, 36, landlord of the Blue Boar public house in nearby
Longworth, said Dr Kelly was "a very well liked gentleman".


Police say Dr Kelly is an avid walker and has good local knowledge of the
many footpaths surrounding his home.

A Ministry of Defence spokeswoman said: "We are aware that Dr David Kelly
has gone missing and we are obviously concerned."

Rules

The ministry said Dr Kelly had at no point been threatened with suspension
or dismissal for speaking to Mr Gilligan.

It was made clear to him that he had broken civil service rules by having
unauthorised contact with a journalist, but "that was the end of it", said a
spokesman.

Downing Street says "normal personnel procedures" were followed after Dr
Kelly volunteered that he might have been the source of Mr Gilligan's
report.

It was made clear to Dr Kelly that his name was likely to become public
knowledge because he was one of only a small number of people it could have
been about, a spokesman said.

After questioning Dr Kelly earlier this week, the Commons foreign affairs
select committee said it was "most unlikely" he was the main source for the
BBC story.

And they said Dr Kelly, who has worked as a weapons inspector in Iraq, had
been "poorly treated" by the government - a charge strongly rejected by the
MoD.

Committee chairman Donald Anderson told the BBC his "heart went out" to Dr
Kelly's family as the search for the official went on.

Another member of the committee, Tory John Maples said he was "speechless"
after hearing of the discovery of a body.

"If it is (Dr Kelly), it is just awful. What can you say? Nothing," he said.

"There must be more to this than we had thought. I do not know what that
means, I just think there is."

Tory MP Richard Ottaway, another committee member, said: "He is not used to
the media glare, he is not used to the intense spotlight he has been put
under."

The BBC has rejected Mr Anderson's claim that Mr Gilligan was an "unreliable
witness" who had changed his story about the Iraq dossier claims when he met
the committee in private on Thursday.

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