Campaigners renewed their plea for a full independent inquiry over 7 July intelligence

Survivors, and families of victims have renewed their calls for a full public inquiry into the intelligence behind the 7 July bombings in which 52 people died despite a report by the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) that clears the Security Service of any blame.

In the long-awaited but heavily-censored second report, the committee said it "cannot criticise" decisions made by MI5. They revealed the agency was stretched to the limit in 2004 as it emerged 54 "essential" potential terrorist targets were not being watched at all.

Prime Minster Gordon Brown said "The review shows that there is no evidence to support various allegations about clues or ignored warnings."

Source

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8056534.stm