A MYSTERIOUS island that was at the centre of World War II experiments has dark secret linked to germ warfare.
Dubbed “Anthrax Island”, the uninhabited Gruinard Island is too dangerous to visit after it was contaminated by a series of secret poisonous experiments.
Gruinard Island was the centre of secret WWII anthrax experiments was deemed too dangerous to visit[/caption] The island also suffered a large wildfire in 2022, which went end to end[/caption]In 1962, a BBC reporter set out to investigate the local reports of secret WWII experiments which caused unexplained animals deaths.
Reporter Fyfe Robertson said: “Hereabouts, they call it the island of death, the mystery Island, and for good reason.
“Now, this is not a story of old dark deeds or Highland superstition. No, this story started in 1942.”
With most of Europe on a knife’s edge in 1942, then UK Prime Minister Winston Churchill tasked a team of top scientists to find a way to harness anthrax as a weapon.
The project, called Operation Vegetarian, had started under Paul Fildes, then head of the biology department at Porton Down, a military facility in Wiltshire.
Deemed the perfect location for the series of secret experiments, Gruinard Island is off the west coast of Scotland.
What actually happened in those experiments remained a mystery until a Ministry of Defence declassified a video 50 years later.
The shocking footage showed approximately 80 sheep exposed to an anthrax cloud.
The men conducting the experiments wore cloth overalls and hair protectors as well as respirators and gloves.
The results were devastating.
Within days all the sheep were dead and infected carcasses were incinerated or buried under tonnes of rubble when a cliff on the island was blown up.
While the experiment was deemed a success, the anthrax bomb was never used and the deadly spores remained on the island.
By the end of the war, Gruinard Island had been poisoned, burned, abandoned and deemed too dangerous for anyone to visit.
Yet concerns remained that the poisoned remained and the military quarantined the island indefinitely and put warning signs up.
The island’s history was all but forgotten until a group known as Dark Harvest commandos launched a move to focus attention on the deadly contamination.
The group, which mysteriously appeared, began it’s campaign with a letter to the Glasgow Herald Newspaper, which said: “By the time you read this the campaign will have started in earnest.
“The first delivery will have been made – and where better to send the seeds of death than to the place from whence they came?”
That place was the Porton Down biological research centre in Wiltshire, the top secret Ministry of Defence laboratory.
A bucket of soil was found near the perimeter, and scientists quickly discovered that it came from the island that was abandoned in the 40s.
Four days after bringing the bucket of soil to Porton Down they struck again, this time targeting the Conservative Party conference in Blackpool.
Unlike the first sample, this one turned out not to contain anthrax but the authorities were on high alert.
Det Insp Colin MacDonald was one of the officers tasked with finding out who but he was met with a wall of silence.
He told the 2022 BBC documentary “The Mystery of Anthrax Island”: “I felt there was maybe more known in the community than was being said.”
On 7 December 1981, the Dark Harvest pinned a final letter to the door of the UK government’s Scottish Office HQ in Edinburgh.
Instead of threats, the letter declared that the aims of their protest had been met and there would be no further action – for now.
As mysteriously as they appeared, the Dark Harvest commandos disappeared.
Their scare campaign seemed to hasten the clean up of anthrax spores on the island.
By 1986, Gruinard was again a hive of activity as teams of scientists, vaccinated against anthrax and dressed in protective clothing, prepared to return the island to its natural state.
The island was finally declared anthrax free on April 24, 1990.
The uninhabited island went up in flames in 2022 after a wildfire tore through the island.
Approximately 200 hectares were burnt. It was reported that no damage was done.
Anthrax is a lethal bacteria, especially when inhaled, and it proves fatal in almost all cases, even with medical treatment.
Anthrax is found naturally in soil around the world and commonly affects livestock and wild animals.
People usually get sick with anthrax if they come in contact with infected animals or contaminated animal products.
However, it is rare in humans.
Symptoms show up anywhere from one day to more than two months after you’re exposed to the bacteria that cause anthrax.
What are the symptoms in humans?
Direct contact with anthrax can cause raised boil-like lesions on the skin which develop a black centre.
This skin infection normally responds to early treatment with antibiotics.
Anyone who has come in contact with anthrax must see a GP immediately.
What are the symptoms in livestock?
Cattle and sheep can die quickly from anthrax, but their carcasses may show no obvious signs of the disease.
But the length of the illness varies and some animals may have signs of illness for several days before death.
All unexplained deaths of cattle are investigated for anthrax.
Anthrax is a notifiable animal disease.
If you suspect it you must report it immediately by calling the Defra Rural Services Helpline on 03000 200 301. In Wales, contact 0300 303 8268. In Scotland, contact your local Field Services Office. Failure to do so is an offence.