In the middle October 1964, Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip paid a royal visit to Kamloops run by the Roman Catholic Church, In Canada. William Coombes was an inmate of the school at the time. This was the first time in months all the children got given new clothes and new shoes the day before the Queens visit. He remembers the visit as odd because they came as without any fanfare or media attention. He recognised them and the school principal told them it was the Queen.
The day the Queen arrived Coombes was part of a group of children who went on a picnic with the Queen, Prince Philip and some of the priests. They went down to a meadow near Dead Man’s Creek. It was weird because we all had to bend down and kiss the Queens' foot, she was wearing a white laced boot, said, Coombes.
After a while, Coombes saw ten children leave the picnic with the royal couple and those children never returned. They were never seen again. The group that disappeared were seven boys and three girls aged for six to fourteen. They were all from the smart group in class, two of the boys were brothers.
William Coombes was scheduled to appear as the star witness against Queen Elizabeth II and Pope Ratizinger who were served with a summons by the ITCCS (The International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State) to appear before a tribunal on charges of complicity in child trafficking, genocide, and crimes against humanity, in Brussels, Belgium.
William Coombes never got to testify, he died shortly before he was supposed to give evidence. Coombes had just given a radio interview discussing the kidnappings in 2010 when he, in good health, was ordered to report for tests at the Vancouver St Paul’s Catholic Hospital. While there he was given an injection that put him into a coma. Within hours, and without consent of his family members, Coombes was pulled off life support.
After nearly a year of litigation Queen Elizabeth and her husband, Prince Phillip was found guilty by the ITCCS in the disappearance of ten native children from the Catholic-run Kamloops residential school in British Columbia. Grieving parents haven’t seen their children since they left for a picnic with the Royal couple on Oct. 10, 1964.
According to an article written by the ITCCS on 7th May 2014, Vivian Cunningham, a serving soldier in the Irish Guards Regiment in Aldershot, Hampshire, has been detained, institutionalized and drugged against his will for mentioning to a senior officer the Common Law arrest warrants against convicted felon Elizabeth Windsor (aka “Queen Elizabeth”).
No comments:
Post a Comment