I would like to think, that was a different time, same as any other war post ww2, especially the indochina war where primitive methods was used, and how many civilians was killed during the war, and post war
All previous inquiries, local and national have failed to tackle the central problem. They may ( in some cases) have recognised the acts of the perpetrators (although usually not considered all the circumstances) but have failed to recognise or give due emphasis to both the scale and the ethnicity of the perpetrators. These are absolutely central facts to the whole business. They, together with the appalling and often will full failings of those whose duty it was to investigate have been covered up.
Further local inquiries will be vulnerable to similar failings - so entrenched is the "cover up ethos" in the local political, social and yes, police, establishments that they will not be trusted.
A specific, focussed and independent National Inquiry will certainly go over much ground again, but such is the public interest, press interest and popular outrage at the events of the last two decades, a cover up on a national scale will be impossible to mount, nor will any recommendations it may make be ignored.
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