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  • ...last December that Ahmed Chalabi, the leader of the Pentagon-backed Iraqi National Congress, had engineered the Erinys contract in order to set up a private m In 2003 a report in the ''National Journal'' shed some light on the relationship between Nour USA and Erinys.
    90 KB (13,438 words) - 14:39, 27 June 2011
  • Doctors are also expected to participate in the machinery of surveillance and intervention that has developed under the rubric of 'child protection'. ...ty'. See [http://www.socialaffairsunit.org.uk/ 'About Us'], Social Affairs Unit website, accessed November 2008</ref>.
    119 KB (16,177 words) - 08:21, 6 November 2021
  • ...nths compiling a report for the right wing think-tank the [[Social Affairs Unit]] on extremism in British Universities. <ref>Polly Curtis, 'They don't sit ...ctivity on British Campuses'' Published by the right wing [[Social Affairs Unit]] in Autumn 2005. The report argued that British universities are in Glees'
    27 KB (4,127 words) - 09:14, 13 November 2017
  • ...day's CBI) and the other predominantly Midlands manufacturing group, the [[National Union of Manufacturers]], were set up during the first World War and they m ...organisations united by peak federations and all finally capped by a great national forum of workers and managers and employers, embraced by the protection of
    178 KB (28,232 words) - 12:30, 7 September 2022
  • Unit H ...encompassing air defence/command and control centres and ground-based air surveillance and weapons-locating radars. Awaiting US and French regulatory approval as
    8 KB (1,118 words) - 06:17, 23 March 2018
  • ...ary coup in which the military intervene in Government in the name of the 'National Will'." ...manufactured or exaggerated crisis) to impose on Britain a government of "national unity". This imposed government - led by [[Louis Mountbatten|Mountbatten]]
    58 KB (9,216 words) - 20:55, 1 February 2008
  • ...th a major trade union. In early 1966 it emerged that union would be the [[National Union of Seamen]] (NUS). The NUS was a strategically important union but no ...programme, was that appeals for funds for the strike were being made on a national basis but were to be sent to the Victoria and Albert Branch of the NUS whic
    50 KB (8,091 words) - 20:58, 1 February 2008
  • ...elfare only gets one brief mention as a 'minor' requirement to comply with national labour laws.[12] ...es, making any independent monitoring of its practices very difficult. The National Labor Committee in the US did manage to track down a factory producing toys
    64 KB (10,114 words) - 13:16, 8 September 2009
  • ..., they argued, the EU aid budget should be dismantled, and returned to the national aid budgets of member states.<ref>[http://www.openeurope.org.uk/Content/doc ...immigration policy, through which it can opt into EU laws which are in its national interest. This approach could be bolstered, however, by creating a ‘rever
    79 KB (11,371 words) - 07:02, 29 January 2018
  • ...ge, assassination and demolition parties into insurgent-held areas, border surveillance, . . . liaison with, and organisation of friendly guerrilla forces operatin ::The 1974 file from the prime minister’s office – found at the [[National Archives]] in London in January – sheds new light on the early history of
    10 KB (1,574 words) - 22:48, 5 February 2014
  • ...not clear whether [[Edward Heath]] and [[Harold Wilson]] were told of the surveillance. Historian Stephen Dorril suggests this revelation appears to justify Wilso The surveillance was ended on the orders of Prime Minister [[James Callaghan]] in 1977. Call
    12 KB (1,817 words) - 17:33, 17 February 2015
  • ...dition-victim-sami-al-saadi-ruling?CMP=share_btn_tw GCHQ conducted illegal surveillance, investigatory powers tribunal rules], theguardian.com, 29 April 2015.</ref *Intelligence Analysis Unit & Open Source Joint Working Group.<ref name="AldrichGCHQ565">Richard J. Ald
    11 KB (1,311 words) - 09:35, 23 February 2022
  • ...Alias=Bob Robinson|Series=undercover police officers|Image=PX_A_07.016.jpg|Unit=Special Demonstration Squad|DatesDeployed=1983 or 1984<ref name="DATE DISCR ...e/2014/08/25/the-spy-who-loved-me-2 ‘The Spy Who Loved Me: An undercover surveillance operation that went too far’], ''The New Yorker'', August 25 2014 issue (
    114 KB (15,683 words) - 22:17, 23 April 2021
  • ...ide to [[Tony Blair]] and served as head of the [[Strategic Communications Unit]] in Downing Street.<ref>Grice, Andrew, "[http://findarticles.com/p/article ...ory Board of [[PGI Protection Group International]] (executive protection, surveillance and risk consulting)<ref name="Symons"/>
    11 KB (1,418 words) - 14:27, 6 November 2014
  • ...d to the decision to reorganise it in 1972 as the [[Special Reconnaissance Unit]] under the direct control of HQ Northern Ireland. Mark Urban quotes [[Lord Carver]] as stating: "For some time various surveillance operations by soldiers in plain clothes had been in train, initiated by [[F
    11 KB (1,726 words) - 19:56, 4 July 2014
  • ...he Taoiseach 5 April 1974 Army Plain Clothes Patrols in Northern Ireland], National Archives PREM 16/154.</ref> It is better known even within the Army, by a v ...Prime Minister [[Harold Wilson]] in April 1974, the Special Reconnaissance Unit replaced the [[Military Reaction Force]] units created in 1971:
    15 KB (2,384 words) - 13:20, 17 January 2020
  • ...It is the successor unit to the deeply secretive [[Special Reconnaissance Unit]] formed in 1972/3, which operated via a range of cover names including [[4 ...to a number of press reports, Members of the regiment were involved in the surveillance of [[Jean Charles de Menezes]] prior to his shooting on 22 July 2005. The '
    9 KB (1,277 words) - 01:17, 18 September 2012
  • ...n Northern Ireland, most notably, it appears, the [[Special Reconnaissance Unit]], and which have reportedly become part of the [[Special Reconnaissance Re ...Prime Minister [[Harold Wilson]] in April 1974, the Special Reconnaissance Unit replaced the [[Military Reaction Force]] units created in 1971:
    3 KB (463 words) - 12:40, 6 January 2011
  • The [[Special Demonstration Squad]] is a Special Branch Unit established in the late 1960s as a result of the rise of the New Left. ...s 1. Subversive My Arse], BBC News, accessed 10 April 2008.</ref> It was a unit of the [[Metropolitan Police Service]] with a remit to prevent disorder.<re
    11 KB (1,563 words) - 05:28, 23 January 2020
  • ...t, due diligence &amp; financial services, personal protection and counter-surveillance. His role was generating clients and introducing them to the relevant indiv ...ary measures were pressed, and Flood returned to duties at the Extradition Unit.
    45 KB (6,412 words) - 16:49, 7 January 2021

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