Fury as Ed Miliband accused of ‘desecrating’ hero pilot’s resting place with solar farm | UK | News

Ed Miliband is accused of “celebrating” the memory of a heroic pilot after confirming a solar farm on the resting place. Just three days after the Labor Party came to power, Cambridgeshire gave a green light to the Sunnna Energy Farm in Isleham. On October 13, 1949, a US Air Force Boeing B-50 supporteria with 16 500LB bombs launched an application flight from nearby Raf Lakenheath to Helligoland, Germany.
However, the disaster was shot when a fire broke out shortly after the departure. 27 -year -old US pilot George Ingham had to remove the plane from Isleham, to risk the life of his crew, or to remove the village and to destroy the village. In a “terrifying” explosion that blows the windows of the local primary school, the elderly natives remembered the bombardment plane Isleham as a narrow loss before hitting a large area just outside the village.
Linda Dunbavin, 80, was only four years old when the plane crashed, and accused Mr. Miliband of erasing the memory of heroic men.
During the accident, he was in the school with two sisters and three cousins and told him that he had heard a “supreme explosion”.
Daily said to Mail: “We went home and my grandmother said, ‘Oh my God, my God, an plane has fallen’.
“These soldiers gave our lives to save our village and all generation children. My grandfather went there and saw pieces of hand and foot everywhere. Ed Miliband blesses his blood and bones.”
89 -year -old David Brown was in the school when the bombing fell. He said: “I’m not satisfied with building a Sun Farm on Sunnica. Disrespectful of these men.”
Mr. Miliband’s decision will affect the other 11 villages in Cambridgeshire and Suffolk, and despite the 2023 planning inspector report, it was called “inappropriate” because of the potential of human residues to be still in the area.
A Sunnica spokesman said: “Accident coup crateer accurately confirmed geophysical research.
He continued: “Accepting the importance of the accident crater, we proposed an exclusion zone where no development will take place around.”
Energy Safety and Net Zero Department said: “We respect the importance of this area for those in Isleham and the memory of those who disappeared in the 1949 USAF accident.
“We support the commitment to honor by creating a protected area around the site.”




