Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

VC hero calls for quick action

- LEISA SCOTT

VICTORIA Cross recipient Daniel Keighran says any criminal investigat­ions over alleged war crimes should proceed “with a sense of urgency”.

The decorated hero revealed he was upset by the allegation­s and said the public has every right to be, too.

Mr Keighran said his thoughts were with defence personnel “who have done the right thing throughout their career and were unaware” of the alleged atrocities.

Mr Keighran served in Afghanista­n in 2007 as a Bushmaster armoured-vehicle driver with the Special Operations Task Group, one of the units from which 25 soldiers are alleged to have been involved in the unlawful killing of 39 Afghan men between 2005 and 2016.

“I was working with individual­s at that point in time where the window of these allegation­s occurred and I saw nothing of that nature,” Mr Keighran said.

“I saw profession­al soldiers going about their work in a high-risk environmen­t. So I feel for those.

“It comes back to the great work I have done, that my unit has done, and those in the general defence force has done. Our reputation is tarnished essentiall­y and I think the Australian public should be upset, I’m upset.”

After completing his tour with the SOTG, the then Corporal Keighran returned to Afghanista­n in 2010 with his original company, the 6RAR’s Delta Company, where he was involved in a three-hour battle

with Taliban fighters in Uruzgan province.

He received the Victoria Cross for “deliberate acts of exceptiona­l courage” after launching into a series of daring runs in which he made himself the target of heavy Taliban fire to divert attack from a wounded soldier, who died, and to help his team identify multiple enemy positions.

Mr Keighran, who now works for multinatio­nal defence supplier, Thales, urged investigat­ions towards criminal prosecutio­n to proceed without delay.

“It’s taken four years to get this report (by the InspectorG­eneral of the Australian Defence Force) out so I would imagine it’s going to be a decade to continue to investigat­e this before it comes to a conclusion,” Mr Keighran said. “They really do need to pursue this with a sense of urgency and I do hope that’s the approach they take.

“I dare say there would be enough informatio­n by the sound of it to be able to pursue individual­s, however, I feel this is going to be a long process, drawn out.

“I look forward to seeing evidence presented.”

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 ??  ?? Daniel Keighran.
Daniel Keighran.

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