Chichester Observer

Lifting the curtain on state secrecy

- phil.hewitt@nationalwo­rld.com Phil Hewitt

TV producer and journalist Geoffrey Seed is in print with Death in a Time of Conspiracy (Cranthorpe Millner, £12).

Geoffrey, who lives in chi chester, explained :“My work as a TV producer brought me into contact with various closed worlds – of secret intelligen­ce agencies, special military units etc.

"I’ve been able to see behind the curtains such outfits draw around themselves, albeit only briefly but long enough to observe how human weakness, ambition and political expediency can align in the shadows. People are intrigued by spooks and that which they cannot see and most likely, don’t understand. My novel draws from personal knowledge and experience­s and in many ways illustrate show the Law of Unexpected consequenc­es comes to bear even in the best run conspiracy.

“Death in a Time of Conspiracy is not a car-chasebang-bang-you’re-dead airport thriller. It has depth and nuance, strong female characters and an emphasis on the human cost of when agents go rogue.

"It was partly inspired by a man who’d worked undercover for the British authoritie­s and wanted me to write a book about his life. As I was rather fond of my own, I declined. He wasn’t short of murderous enemieswho’ d get to him through me. In the end, he understood my reasoning. He’s dead now… but from natural causes. With regard to writing; the process is not unlike pain…it’s rather pleasant when it stops.

“This is my fourth politireti­red cal thriller. The first, A Place of Strangers, relates to the Holocaust and was inspired by informatio­n given to me by a European diplomat who’d worked covertly for the Mossad, Israel’s secret intelligen­ce service. My last effort, The Boy From Zion Street, uses my dysfunctio­nal postwar childhood as a backdrop for a tale of vengeance, blackmail and conspiracy engulfing a judge before the 2015 general election here.”

Geoffrey says he started writing “after people running television got younger every week”: “A brilliant actor friend, Patrick Malahide, urged me to fictionali­se some of my experience­s in bumpy places like Northern Ireland, southern Africa, Eastern Europe and Latin America where I produced Tom Mangold’s BBC Panorama investigat­ion into cocaine smuggling.

"Not everything heard on the road makes it to the screen and neither do the stories of the brave, fascinatin­g, crazy people one meets either. I’d also had my fair share of grief with the British authoritie­s, not least MI5 and their arms and legs in the Special Branch. Using witnesses from within MI5 who, like me, were risking two years’ jail,iproducedt he most authoritat­ive account of that organisati­on’s domestic spying on trades unionists, peace campaigner­s and other alleged subversive­s. For making this programme for Channel 4, my contributo­rs and I were investigat­ed under the Official Secrets Act.

"But contrary to all the legal warnings we and Channel 4 had received, no prosecutio­ns ensued. In my opinion, our evidence couldn’t be challenged and whoever makes the decision to charge journalist­s doing their job blinked before putting us in the dock.

 ?? ?? Geoffrey Seed
Geoffrey Seed

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