Difference between revisions of "John Adye"

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In the early 1990s, Adye was involved in attempts to establish the provenance of tapes of intimate conversations involving members of the royal family, according to evidence at the inquest into the death of [[Princess Diana]] reported in the ''Daily Telegraph'':
 
In the early 1990s, Adye was involved in attempts to establish the provenance of tapes of intimate conversations involving members of the royal family, according to evidence at the inquest into the death of [[Princess Diana]] reported in the ''Daily Telegraph'':
  
::[[Lord Fellowes]], the Queen's former private secretary, told the inquest that the revelations prompted a series of high-level meetings and correspondence over who had secretly recorded them, with input from Sir [[Robin Butler]], the then cabinet secretary, Dame [[Stella Rimington]], former [[MI5]] chief, and Sir [[John Adye]], the head of GCHQ.
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::[[Robert Fellowes|Lord Fellowes]], the Queen's former private secretary, told the inquest that the revelations prompted a series of high-level meetings and correspondence over who had secretly recorded them, with input from Sir [[Robin Butler]], the then cabinet secretary, Dame [[Stella Rimington]], former [[MI5]] chief, and Sir [[John Adye]], the head of GCHQ.
 
It was decided that there would not be a full investigation amid fears that news of any inquiry would leak out and further fuel public suspicion.<ref>Richard Edwards, [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1578364/Home-Secretary-Kenneth-Clarke-blocked-Diana-Squidgygate-tape-inquiry.html Home Secretary Kenneth Clarke 'blocked Diana Squidgygate tape inquiry'], telegraph.co.uk, 12 February 2008.</ref>
 
It was decided that there would not be a full investigation amid fears that news of any inquiry would leak out and further fuel public suspicion.<ref>Richard Edwards, [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1578364/Home-Secretary-Kenneth-Clarke-blocked-Diana-Squidgygate-tape-inquiry.html Home Secretary Kenneth Clarke 'blocked Diana Squidgygate tape inquiry'], telegraph.co.uk, 12 February 2008.</ref>
  

Latest revision as of 20:06, 12 July 2009

Sir John Adye was director of GCHQ from 1989 to 1996.[1]

Squidgygate and Camillagate tapes

In the early 1990s, Adye was involved in attempts to establish the provenance of tapes of intimate conversations involving members of the royal family, according to evidence at the inquest into the death of Princess Diana reported in the Daily Telegraph:

Lord Fellowes, the Queen's former private secretary, told the inquest that the revelations prompted a series of high-level meetings and correspondence over who had secretly recorded them, with input from Sir Robin Butler, the then cabinet secretary, Dame Stella Rimington, former MI5 chief, and Sir John Adye, the head of GCHQ.

It was decided that there would not be a full investigation amid fears that news of any inquiry would leak out and further fuel public suspicion.[2]

In his own testimony to the inquest, Adye denied that GCHQ was bugging the royal family, which he said would have required a warrant from the Foreign Secretary.[3]

Intelligence Services Bill

In 1993 Adye gave an unprecedented press conference with MI6 chief Sir Colin McColl to welcome the Intelligence Services Bill, which put MI6 and GCHQ on a statutory footing.[4]

Notes