The mystery of murdered British soldiers on their land is solved during World War II

The disaster of military exercises had resulted in the deaths of seven British soldiers in Dundee, but for many years it was not known because of their deaths until today it has shed light on their fate. Today it is the 75th anniversary of secret military training in wartime where seven Britons were killed on land [...]
Today it is the 75th anniversary of secret military training in wartime where seven Britons were killed in their lands.

The mistake occurred at the D-Day military exercise on June 13th in 1843, in which military paratrus had fallen on the Tai River in Dundee, Scotland.
Anna Mulfrod witnessed this case, but she never told what really happened there. A few decades later, her son Michael revealed the truth.
If I could meet my mother, Anna Mulfrod would tell her the mystery of tragedy has finally been found.

She's been telling me the horror story sometimes. By four o'clock in the morning, Mulford had heard several engines south of the Tai Railway.
With the thick wind up to about 100 feet [30 m], it saw, while 18 military - equipped paratrus were immersed in water up to 20 feet [9 m] deep, “reported. Sky News” Transmission Periscope.
A Polish officer had arrived, and my mother had asked him about the bodies that had fallen into the river, which he had responded to: “They're okay”.

She had begun researching the missing bodies when the British woman plunged into archives. All of this happened when she practiced journalism.
By the time he intensified his research by asking authorities about finding troops, British intelligence had repeatedly threatened him with life, and so, according to the latest claims, the seven troops were killed by British themselves for reasons still mysterious.. /Periscopi/












