LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
Oh course people know, to be able to describe it. I lived in London when the IRA had their bombing campaigns. I was actually working at an office in Victoria when I had a bird's eye view of the cannon going off in the erstwhile PM John Major's back yard at No. 10 Downing street. I looked out of the window at the commotion to see a startled workman hanging on to scaffold for dear life having almost fallen off in fright. Likewise, people recognise when something has collided.
Of course, the survivors of the Estonia might have been mistaken but that doesn't mean their eye witness accounts should be ignored and not investigated.
Calculate it for yourself: 29 out of 137 survivors.
Ah well no, because 1) the closest part of Victoria to Downing Street is just under a mile away, 2) the "cannon going off" was actually an improvised mortar attack from a van parked up on Whitehall, and 3) as such, I very strongly question your claimed recollection. Which, inadvertently (on your part) just goes to show that the claimed recollections of claimed witnesses - especially those with no experience or expertise in the field - can very often be wildly unreliable (regardless of the sincerity of the "recollection").
As a further illustration of relevance, my father - a fairly senior military officer and diplomat - was actually working on that day in his corner office of the Banqueting House* on Whitehall, no more than 20-30 yards from the parked-up position of the van from which the mortars were fired. Despite very good familiarity with ordnance and explosions, he thought the noise of the three mortars being fired was just a vehicle backfiring (although he immediately recognised the depth and reverberation of the three shells as they landed as explosive detonations). Even experienced people can have trouble correctly identifying these sorts of things, if they take place totally unexpectedly - especially if direct eyesight of the event doesn't take place, and the event is only heard.
* Bonus fun fact for history fans: the Banqueting House has a long and storied history; its major "claim to fame" is that it was the scene of the execution (beheading) of King Charles I in *double-checks for accuracy* 1649, on a makeshift scaffold set up in Whitehall outside the building.