Campaigners against industrial solar parks have been highlighting what they describe as a "notorious" case in Ireland.
Dame Diana Johnson wrote to the National Archives (NA) earlier this month to ask why the study – into the impact of German attacks on the city during World War Two – had never been released.The NA has now confirmed that the report is under wraps for 100 years and said it was looking into the questions raised by the MP.
Prof David Atkinson, an expert on the Hull Blitz, said the report was likely to have contained sensitive information when written, but why the embargo had not been lifted after more than 80 years was a mystery.during German bombing raids on Hull, with 3,000 injured and more than 150,000 made homeless.Dame Diana said: "The rate of death and destruction in Hull from Nazi bombs in the Blitz was comparable with that in London, but Hull's suffering was never recognised nationally in those wartime years when we were just referred to as a 'north east coastal town'.
"Hull seems to have been the only town or city treated in this way. An explanation as to why this happened is long overdue, after already being withheld for over 80 years."It's unjustifiable for information about these events to be kept locked away for 17 more years."
Dame Diana has promised to pursue the matter along with colleagues from the University of Hull.
Prof Atkinson, from the university, has researched how the wartime government established secretive surveys in the city to assess how people "got by beneath the bombs".Since then, it seems the Iranian regime has been hiring criminal organisations to carry out kidnappings and killings in an attempt to avoid linking the attacks back to the regime.
But Matt Jukes, the UK's Head of Counter Terrorism Policing, says it is relatively easy for police to infiltrate criminal groups because they are not ideologically aligned with the Iranian regime.It is what he calls a "creeping penetration" by Iran, which the police are trying to disrupt.
Searches are continuing at a number of addresses after five men were arrested on Saturday over an alleged terror plot in the UK.Home Office minister Dan Jarvis said hundreds of officers were carrying out forensic investigations and collecting evidence at different sites across the country during a Commons statement on Tuesday.