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Royal Navy sailors can soon vape on board our nuclear subs
Nigel Nelson
Sailors are set to be allowed to puff e-cigarettes in their nuclear submarines.
The move follows a fugitive whistleblower claiming unauthorised vaping was a safety risk.
Royal Navy medical officers now think there is no risk – and e-cigs would help ratings to give up real cigarettes, reports the Sunday People.
Weapons engineer William McNeilly, 25, went on the run after publishing an online dossier of alleged safety failings in the four-sub Trident fleet.
vfpuk/twitter
Serving again: William McNeilly
They included inadequate tests to see if missiles could be launched safely, alarm systems being muted because they kept going off and top secret documents being left unguarded.
McNeilly, who served aboard sub HMS Victorious, handed himself in and has now returned to duty.
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon dismissed his concerns as wrong or the result of misunderstandings.
Armed Forces Minister Penny Mordaunt said: “Only one of his allegations remains to be concluded – that electronic cigarettes were used on the submarine.”
That made the Navy wonder whether e-cigs do pose a fire risk.
Ms Mordaunt said: “This is now being examined by the Institute of Naval Medicine to ascertain whether electronic cigarettes may be suitable for use on submarines.”
Shadow Armed Forces Minister Kevan Jones said: “It seems top brass don’t know what they’re doing.”
An MoD spokeswoman said: “There is clear evidence e-cigarette use would not have put safety of a boat at risk.”
Royal Navy sailors can soon vape on board our nuclear subs
Nigel Nelson
Sailors are set to be allowed to puff e-cigarettes in their nuclear submarines.
The move follows a fugitive whistleblower claiming unauthorised vaping was a safety risk.
Royal Navy medical officers now think there is no risk – and e-cigs would help ratings to give up real cigarettes, reports the Sunday People.
Weapons engineer William McNeilly, 25, went on the run after publishing an online dossier of alleged safety failings in the four-sub Trident fleet.
vfpuk/twitter
Serving again: William McNeilly
They included inadequate tests to see if missiles could be launched safely, alarm systems being muted because they kept going off and top secret documents being left unguarded.
McNeilly, who served aboard sub HMS Victorious, handed himself in and has now returned to duty.
Defence Secretary Michael Fallon dismissed his concerns as wrong or the result of misunderstandings.
Armed Forces Minister Penny Mordaunt said: “Only one of his allegations remains to be concluded – that electronic cigarettes were used on the submarine.”
That made the Navy wonder whether e-cigs do pose a fire risk.
Ms Mordaunt said: “This is now being examined by the Institute of Naval Medicine to ascertain whether electronic cigarettes may be suitable for use on submarines.”
Shadow Armed Forces Minister Kevan Jones said: “It seems top brass don’t know what they’re doing.”
An MoD spokeswoman said: “There is clear evidence e-cigarette use would not have put safety of a boat at risk.”