More shocking allegations have emerged about Mountbatten and his M15/Loyalist paedophile boys’ home conspiracy.

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More shocking allegations have emerged about Mountbatten and his M15/Loyalist paedophile boys’ home conspiracy. In “Kincora: Britain’s Shame” a new book by investigative journalist Chris Moore

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claims Lord Louis Mountbatten (cousin to the late Queen Elizabeth II) sexually abused five children trafficked from the notorious Kincora Boys’ Home to his summer estate at Classiebawn Castle in Mullaghmore, Sligo. One former resident, Arthur Smyth, says he was just eleven when he was raped twice by Mountbatten at Kincora. He filed a civil case against state institutions in 2022. According to Moore’s research, the boys were first moved to a hotel in Fermanagh before being handed over to Mountbatten’s security detail and spirited across the border to his castle. This, if true, would mean that a sitting member of the British royal family was not only a paedophile but involved in a cross-border child trafficking ring protected by the British state. And it wouldn’t be the first time the name Kincora was involved in British Intelligence. The boys home’s housemaster, William McGrath, was a Loyalist fanatic, the founder of a paramilitary sect called Tara, and a known MI5 asset. For years, McGrath’s crimes against boys were allowed to continue. Whistleblowers like Colin Wallace and Robin Bryans have long claimed that Kincora was used as a blackmail site. A baited trap for paedo politicians, clergy, paramilitaries, and VIPs. According to these accounts, British intelligence not only knew about the abuse but also used it to exert control. Mountbatten was a man of ambition, rumoured to have once entertained the idea of a military-backed government in Britain with himself at the helm. He was also compromised. Whispers of his proclivities dated back decades, surfacing again and again, only to be suppressed by the Palace. The 2014–2016 Historical Institutional Abuse Inquiry acknowledged Kincora as a site of horrific abuse but stopped short of implicating Mountbatten or any members of the establishment. But Chris Moore’s new book brings forward fresh survivor testimonies. Still, no criminal charges have ever been brought. Civil litigation continues. Survivors and campaigners demand a full judicial investigation, one with the power to compel MI5 to open its archives. On the 27th of August, 1979, the IRA assassinated Mountbatten by blowing up his boat off Mullaghmore. Tragically, his grandson, a local boy, and Lady Brabourne were also murdered in the explosion. Since then, former MI5 officers have suggested that the British state knew the attack was coming and let it happen.

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