we ve got a picture here of what appears to be a libyan rebel launching a shoulder-fired missile toward a libyan jet. are these kinds of weapons just floating around libya for the taking now? yes, those weapons are outside of state control now. and our big concern is that they will be diverted to the black market and acquired by terrorists outside of libya. reporter: there s no evidence that libyan rebels have sold weapons to terrorists or that they intend to, but experts say arms traffickers could see the libyan fight as a chance to stock up. one of their most popular weapons, shoulder-fired missiles, move at high speed, right toward the heat emitted by airplanes. most civilian aircraft don t have countermeasures against them. militants are well versed at acquiring and using weapons like this. november 2003, shortly after taking off from baghdad, a dhl cargo plane is hit by a surface-to-air missle. militant video claiming to show the incident. the plane loses hydraulics but the pl
monitors elicit arms sales. we ve got a picture of what appears to be a libyan rebel launches a shoulder-fired missile toward a libyan jet. are these weapons floating around libya for the taking now? yes, those weapons or outside of state control now. and our big concern is that they will be diverted to the black market and acquired by terrorists outside of libya. reporter: there s no evidence that libyan rebels have sold weapon to terrorists or that they intend to, but arms traffickers could see the libyan fight as a chance to stock up. one of their most popular weapons, shoulder-fired missiles move at high speed right at the heat emitted by airplanes. most civilian aircraft don t have countermeasures against them. militants are well versed at acquiring and using weapons like this. november 2003 shortly after taking off in baghdad, a dhl cargo plane is hit from a surface-to-air missile. this is militant video claiming to show the incident. the plane loses hydraulics but
very far. what initially sparked your interest in investigating wakefield? well, it was just an absolute routine assign many. there was a television program that d been paid for by american interest to be broadcast in the uk and i was just assigned to do a piece on it and it started out like that. we asked dr. wakefield for an interview and almost immediately within a matter of hours complaints were being made against me to my editors by dr. wakefield s personal publicist. when was that, that you started doing this investigation? this was in october, november 2003. long time ago now. as you know james murdoch, the owner of your employer, the london times joined the board of glaxosmithkline, which is a manufacturer of mmr. he joined that board in 2009. some people have brought that up as a conflict of interest. absurd. absolutely absurd. in fact, it s interesting, in the last 24 hours, the only american network to have shown no interest whatsoever in the bmj s revelations
received, the citation was that i was probably the only journalist in britain that investigates the drug industry. so i don t think that one goes very far. what initially sparked your interest in investigating wakefield? well, it was just an absolute routine assign many. there was a television program that d been paid for by american interest to be broadcast in the uk and i was just assigned to do a piece on it and it started out like that. we asked dr. wakefield for an interview and almost immediately within a matter of hours complaints were being made against me to my editors by dr. wakefield s personal publicist. when was that, that you started doing this investigation? this was in october, november 2003. long time ago now. as you know james murdoch, the owner of your employer, the london times joined the board of glaxosmithkline, which is a manufacturer of mmr. he joined that board in 2009. some people have brought that up as a conflict of interest. absurd. absolutely
investigates the drug industry. so i don t think that one goes very far. what initially sparked your interest in investigating wakefield? well, it was just an absolute routine assign many. there was a television program that d been paid for by american interest to be broadcast in the uk and i was just assigned to do a piece on it and it started out like that. we asked dr. wakefield for an interview and almost immediately within a matter of hours complaints were being made against me to my editors by dr. wakefield s personal publicist. when was that, that you started doing this investigation? this was in october, november 2003. long time ago now. as you know james murdoch, the owner of your employer, the london times joined the board of glaxosmithkline, which is a manufacturer of mmr. he joined that board in 2009. some people have brought that up as a conflict of interest. absurd. absolutely absurd. in fact, it s interesting, in the last 24 hours, the only american network