The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Fears over deadline as questions raised over SNP exec’s complaint

Witness riddle over party official’s claim

- By Mark Aitken POLITICAL EDITOR

A senior SNP official’s account of being physically assaulted by Alex Salmond was questioned again yesterday.

The party’s chief operating officer Sue Ruddick issued a statement on Monday, as chief executive Peter Murrell gave evidence for the second time to a Holyrood committee of inquiry, to highlight the “bullying” behaviour of MSPS asking to see messages between them.

She said her messages were private and revealed that she had reported “an act of physical aggression” by Mr Salmond to police after an incident on the campaign trail 10 years before. However, Anne Harvey, an assistant to the chief whip for the SNP at Westminste­r, then claimed she was the sole witness to the alleged incident and Mr Salmond had only “brushed past” Ms Ruddick on a stairwell of a block of flats while campaignin­g in a by-election in Glenrothes in 2008. Subsequent­ly, Ms Ruddick insisted Ms Harvey was not present but The Sunday Post understand­s Ms Harvey’s name was given to the police as a witness by Ms Ruddick. She was subsequent­ly questioned by police officers for nine and a half hours over two interviews. Police Scotland said there was “insufficie­nt corroborat­ive evidence” to charge him. At Mr Salmond’s criminal trial last year, he was cleared of 13 charges relating to sexual assault and harassment at the High Court in Edinburgh.

Miss Harvey’s statement last week suggested a “witch hunt” had been improperly launched by the SNP to encourage more allegation­s against Mr Salmond as the police investigat­ion continued. A message to her from Mr Murrell suggested the police in London should be “pressured” to investigat­e allegation­s there and said it would be better if Mr Salmond was facing investigat­ion on as many fronts as possible.

Chris Mceleny, leader of the SNP group on Inverclyde Council, has urged the party to investigat­e concerns that officials were encouragin­g complaints against Mr Salmond.

He said: “It’s not credible for people to pretend this issue doesn’t need addressed. If the party’s business convener, Kirsten Oswald, fails to do her job, the national executive committee should have a vote of no confidence in her and use their powers to suspend chief executive Peter Murrell and launch an independen­t investigat­ion.” The Scottish Conservati­ves said: “A variety of SNP witnesses have given conflictin­g accounts around various alleged incidents relating to Alex Salmond and these latest contradict­ions raise further serious questions.”

Meanwhile, Mr Salmond’s legal team remains in discussion­s with the committee to establish if he will be able to give evidence, with a written High Court ruling expected to clarify the situation within days.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is expected to give evidence in two weeks’ time, followed by publicatio­n of the report, before parliament goes into recess for May’s election. MSPS investigat­ing the Scottish Government’s handling of complaints against the former first minister meanwhile have expressed concerns the SNP will attempt to “slow-walk” a Holyrood debate on the findings of their report.

Lib Dem MSP and committee member Alex Cole-hamilton said: “The Scottish Government has slow-walked every aspect of this inquiry. I think it is probably in their interests for it not to be met with parliament­ary debate.”

Scottish Labour interim leader and committee member Jackie Baillie said: “The priority is to get a report published and hopefully, if there is time, there can be a debate in parliament too.”

To Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny they are a “modern-day Sherlock Holmes” for exposing how the Kremlin allegedly poisoned him. To despots and dictators, they are a thorn in the flesh as their sleuthing reveals evidence of terrible crimes.

To supporters, however, the Bellingcat website investigat­ors, led by founder Eliot Higgins, are shining a light on the world’s darkest corners.

Bellingcat, dubbed “an “intelligen­ce agency for the people,” have deployed opensource

intelligen­ce (OSI), informatio­n freely available on social media, smartphone­s and the web to expose everything from locating terrorist training camps to revealing statespons­ored crime and human rights atrocities. They even found a lost dog.

The site’s most spectacula­r successes include identifyin­g the two Russian agents behind the Salisbury poisonings, detailing what happened to Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 and proving Syrian leader Bashar al-assad used chemical weapons on his own people.

Higgins has detailed the organisati­on’s work in a book, We Are Bellingcat. It charts the journey from his blog to an acclaimed investigat­ive force, making enemies at the highest level of government­s around the world. “It’s about informatio­n based purely on evidence that can inform people about what’s happening in the world,” Higgins explains.

“We involve the people in the process itself and produce a product they can see and understand, not just a bunch of informatio­n being leaked out randomly or us saying we have a source and you can trust us.”

Bellingcat grew from Higgins’ obsession with current affairs, particular­ly during the Arab Spring in 2011. While working in admin, he was a regular blogger under the name Brown Moses, sharing informatio­n he’d found online.

“I was frustrated about how the conflict in Libya had been reported on when there was such a vast amount of OSI. I could see a use for it,” he said.

“I was always writing for myself, never for an audience, and was frustrated that bloggers were using this material for conspiracy theories, making huge leaps of logic.

“I accidental­ly stumbled into quite big stories. It grew, and I gained a decent reputation among journalist­s and other people in the community. I just wanted a site where people could post articles and learn how to do investigat­ions.

“It was about building a community of people who could research and investigat­e.”

That sense of collaborat­ion has become core to Bellingcat, as well as their founding idea of “identify, verify and amplify.”

Higgins added: “It’s quite unusual to show exactly how you’re doing stuff and where all the informatio­n is. People like to have their secrets and their special sources, but we’re like: ‘Here’s everything.’”

Bellingcat’s work came to internatio­nal attention following the downing of MH17 in 2014, in which 298 people died. They figured out that it had been hit by a Russian Buk missile by looking through images posted online and mapping. They also found its deployment involved senior Russian officials.

Higgins said: “It was a proud moment for us in 2016 when the team investigat­ing MH17 gave a press conference.

“It was a scary moment as we were a bit worried they

might disagree with us, but they agreed with everything we were saying. That was big for Bellingcat and OSI as a whole as it then led a lot more people to take it more seriously.

“They saw that our work had been validated by an official investigat­ion, and that OSI was a real thing that worked and not just kind of a magic trick.”

Using similar methods, they unveiled the identity of one of the two suspects in the poisoning of the Skripals.

They also uncovered evidence showing Moscow’s

FSB security service targeting Navalny, an anti-corruption activist and opponent of Vladimir Putin, who survived a Novichok poisoning.

All of these discoverie­s came from hours of pouring through informatio­n online. This could be finding connection­s between people on social media, sketching out a map of military movements seen on a Youtube clip, or matching satellite imagery to pictures posted to Twitter to determine an exact location and times.

Often, the material can be

traumatic. The Bellingcat team were exposed to countless images and videos of chemical attacks in Syria, and Higgins recalled his distress at finding a toy his daughter has a version of in the wreckage of MH17.

“We’re always very aware of issues like vicarious trauma,” he said of looking out for his fellow investigat­ors. “Syria has produced a lot of horrific material, we’re very careful that they’re not overexpose­d.

“It can sometimes be easy to see a link and click on it without really thinking about

Bellingcat’s name is inspired by the fable of the mice who planned to put a bell on a feline tormentor so they could plot its movements and how their plan was fine until it came to finding a volunteer to carry it out. It supplied a nickname for Scots nobleman Archibald Douglas. In 1482, at a meeting plotting against James III’S adviser, Robert Cochrane, Lord Gray said “Tis well said, but wha daur bell the cat?” Douglas, the Earl of Angus, accepted the challenge and was known as Archie Bell-the-cat.

the impact it’s going to have on you. You don’t need that in your brain. Once it’s in there, that’s the kind of stuff you don’t forget after you see.”

For Bellingcat, fighting falsehoods has become as vital as showing the facts.

A striking example of the power of misinforma­tion manifested on January 6, as supporters of Donald Trump stormed the US Capitol. “The events in Washington showed how dangerous it can be,” Higgins said. “It could be a fundamenta­l threat to society if we don’t take it seriously. In the US, people got really into a forum post, built an entire alternativ­e universe around it, and managed to convince thousands of people it was real.

“The Republican party started leaning into it and that’s the danger, where mainstream discourse starts using paranoid conspiracy theories looking for that extra bit of power, that extra vote. Once you abandon the truth in the pursuit of power, then we’re completely screwed as a society.”

With all that Bellingcat has uncovered and the powerful forces involved, Higgins has received countless anonymous threats online, and the group have experience­d a number of cyberattac­ks.

But, at home in Leicester, he remains unfazed, more worried about the potential actions of an individual rather than a state, and taking Russian interferen­ce in their work as a compliment.

“It shows it does matter to them that we’re doing this stuff. They might say we’re working for the CIA or MI5 but ultimately, they’re worried about what we’re doing. It’s the best advertisin­g when Russia Today, Sputnik or some official has a go at us. It shows we’re doing something right in most people’s eyes.

“I know the positive impact our work is having and that there are some things that are bigger than your own personal fears and safety. It’s not great, but if you can’t stand up, you’re sitting doing nothing.”

And the work is not always about big conspiraci­es and Russian hit squads. “You can have influence big and small,” Higgins said. “Last year I helped find a dog that was stolen, using a number plate analysis technique we’d previously used in murders. It was a few hours work, a nice thing to do.

“On the other side of the scale we’ve got a huge amount of work on Russian assassinat­ions. We were told by journalist­s on the ground in Russia that protestors were on the streets as a direct consequenc­e of our investigat­ion into the poisoning of Navalny.

“It’s nice to help people who have had their dogs stolen, it’s a positive impact.

“This is why when I talk about building communitie­s, it’s not just about hunting Russian spies, it’s about having a positive impact on a more personal level sometimes. That counts for something.”

Video calls beset by technical problems have become a familiar feature of lockdown life this year.

It’s one thing to set up a successful Zoom meeting when it’s a friend or family member but, for STV reporter Laura Boyd, getting the Queen of Country to work her laptop was a whole new level of stress.

Chatting to Dolly Parton, the multi-platinum selling music legend, has been a highlight of Laura’s year, despite the gremlins.

“For the first 15 minutes of our interview time I realised I could see her but she couldn’t see me,” explained Laura.

“There was something technicall­y wrong at her end. The camera had cut off.

“Having to tell Dolly Parton, ‘No, I think the problem is on your end…’ was quite awkward!

“I was sitting looking at my screen thinking that this is the biggest interview of my life and it’s not going to work.”

The call, however, was ultimately successful and Laura is now presenting Unmuted, a new celebrity interview series on Scotland Tonight.

In it she chats to celebritie­s about the lighter side of pandemic life – from box sets to baking.

Highlights in the series include a catch-up with Dancing On Ice star John Barrowman, former Doctor Who star Sylvester Mccoy and wrestler Grado.

“John Barrowman’s lockdown when he was living in Palm Springs was quite different to ours

– Segways, swimming in his pools, clearing out his four-car garage!” added Laura, 39.

“Grado is going back to watching Take The High Road, so he can talk details about what’s happening on this old soap.

“Sylvester Mccoy is going to be next week, he was hilarious. He was known as the Twist King of Dunoon, as apparently he introduced the dance to the town.

“He was so smartly dressed on his top half – he had a brilliant flamboyant waistcoat on. On the bottom half he was just like everyone else – he was wearing joggers and a slanket.”

Without access to the studio and a make-up artist Laura admits it’s been a struggle to look quite as glamorous as she usually does on our screens.

“Trying to get a good camera angle at home is tough,” she said. “How does anyone look good on Zoom? I look at my face and wonder how I could get a less flattering angle.

“Some days I try to get away with just filming my top half. Often I’m wearing a nice top but with jammy bottoms.

“With big interviews I try to make an effort and not look like a riot.”

In 2009, Laura was diagnosed with chronic myeloid leukaemia, a form of cancer.

Since then she has returned to work and has become a mum to baby Penelope, who was born via surrogacy with the help of her sister-in-law, Jayne.

Penelope has become an STV co-star, whether Laura likes it or not.

“She wants to be involved in everything, if I have the laptop open she wants to be slamming down on the keys,” added Laura. “I’m paranoid she’s going to send a message to someone.

“I’ve ended up using her in a couple of pieces, and she appeared in a wee bit about online Burns Nights a couple of weeks ago. It took 10 takes to get right, but luckily she loves haggis. She’s not a very compliant co-star.

“She’s kept us going through all of this. You don’t have time to dwell on the doom and gloom with her. She’s brilliant.”

Laura harbours ambitions to interview Billy Connolly about his lockdown life in Florida but, for now, the Dolly Parton conversati­on remains a career highlight.

“She was so lovely and she’s just so on it,” Laura said. “She lists off the things she’s doing and you can’t help but be impressed. I asked what she planned to do next and she started a big spiel about how she was releasing new make-up, perfume and even a line of wigs.

“That woman is unstoppabl­e. If ever I have a lockdown day when I’m tired I think I’ll try to be more Dolly. That should be our lockdown motto.”

 ??  ?? Former FM Alex Salmond
Former FM Alex Salmond
 ??  ?? The wreckage of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 being pieced
The wreckage of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17 being pieced
 ??  ?? Bellingcat founder Eliot Higgins
Bellingcat founder Eliot Higgins
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? together by authoritie­s. A Bellingcat investigat­ion found it had been shot down by a Russian-fired missile
together by authoritie­s. A Bellingcat investigat­ion found it had been shot down by a Russian-fired missile
 ??  ?? Top, CCTV footage of Salisbury suspects Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov, above
Top, CCTV footage of Salisbury suspects Alexander Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov, above
 ?? Picture Andrew Cawley ?? STV’S Laura Boyd at home in Glasgow with her co-star, daughter Penelope
Picture Andrew Cawley STV’S Laura Boyd at home in Glasgow with her co-star, daughter Penelope
 ??  ?? Music legend Dolly Parton
Music legend Dolly Parton

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