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British spy who was groomed in Delhi
By Hasan Suroor
LONDON, SEPT. 9. New Delhi may not exactly be an ideal place for
breeding world-class spies, but one of Britain's top sleuths and
a former head of its secret service MI5, Dame Stella Rimington
who is currently at the centre of a heated controversy over her
coming memoirs, cut her teeth in the corridors of the British
High Commission in Chanakyapuri.
Ms. Rimington, who has sparked a political row by writing about
her time in the secret service, was the ``bored'' wife of a
British diplomat in New Delhi in 1965 when MI5 recruited her to
do a little snooping on the side. ``They have offered me a job
working in the secret part of the High Commission, for five
pounds a week, which I think I will take,'' she wrote home
describing it as a welcome change from doing amateur dramatics
for Delhi's anglophile theatre lovers. There is a photograph of
Ms. Rimington, taken in 1968, shaking hands with the then
President, Dr. Zakir Hussain. By then she had been an MI5 recruit
in New Delhi for three years.
To know what precisely were her functions, one would have to wait
until the memoirs are published, expected later this week, but
given her meteoric rise in a service dominated by ``tweedy guys
with pipes'' those early days in the Indian capital must have
been pretty productive. One story says she was simply doing a
``little work as a clerk/typist'' but those who know a thing or
two about spies point out that they come in many garbs - mostly
under the least conspicuous of covers.
Ms. Rimington, who rose to become the first woman chief of MI5
and the first-ever agency head to be officially identified (until
then the MI5 boss used to be a shadowy figure whose name was an
official secret), has accused the British Government of trying to
block the publication of her memoirs, ``Open Secret: From Bored
Housewife to Head of the Secret Service''. She has in turn been
attacked by the Government, MPs and her agency peers for
betraying secrets of the ``family'' for ``30 pieces of silver'',
a reference to the £ 600,000 advance she is believed have
got for the book. Her critics, including a former KGB agent who
worked for Britain, say it is unethical for former intelligence
agents to disclose the internal functioning of an agency whose
mainstay is secrecy. The Home Office has expressed its ``regret
and discontent'' over her decision to publish.
In an interview to The Guardian which has paid a huge fee to
publish extracts from the memoirs, starting on Monday, Ms.
Rimington alleged that a whispering campaign was launched against
her after she submitted her manuscript to Whitehall for vetting.
She said she was shocked by ``some of the nastiness'' she
suffered at the hands of the very people with whom she had worked
and who were now trying to kill her book. There were attempts to
``deter, scare, and humiliate'' her - and it was ``quite
upsetting because suddenly you go from being an insider to being
an outsider and that's quick a shock.'' For the first time, she
said, she realised what it must be like for ``outsiders'' to deal
with the state. The memoirs have been heavily ``bluepencilled''
by the Home Office with all the ``inconvenient'' bits removed.
The final version is said to be too sanitised to generate
headlines but there are references to MI5 keeping files on
suspected left-wingers and civil rights activists some of whom
are now Ministers in the Blair Government such as Mr. Jack Straw
and Ms. Patricia Hewitt. There are also suggestions of BBC
journalists being vetted by MI5 and prospective MPs being
monitored to see ``if there is anything important - so the Prime
Minister can take into account when he forms his Government.''
Ms. Rimington, who retired in 1996, is the latest in the growing
list of former British spies who have controversially written
about their career in MI5 - the most famous being David Shayler
and Peter Wright. The Official Secrets Act bans any former member
of the intelligence service from disclosing anything about their
work and yet, from time to time, the have- been spies keep
crawling out of the woodwork much to the Government's
embarrassment.
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