Belfast Telegraph

Army veterans deserve to be free from fear of prosecutio­n, say MPs

- BY MICHAEL McHUGH

AN influentia­l committee of MPs has launched an inquiry into protecting British war veterans from prosecutio­n following all conflicts.

The Westminste­r Defence Committee called for former soldiers facing investigat­ions into Troubles-related fatalities in Northern Ireland to be safeguarde­d using an official statute of limitation­s.

The Government is consulting on measures addressing the country’s violent past, including an Historical Investigat­ions Unit (HIU) to search for opportunit­ies for prosecutio­n.

Committee chair Julian Lewis said: “Our concerns are such that we intend to return to the subject of statute of limitation­s and, once again, to explore how former service personnel can be Concerns: Westminste­r Defence Committee chairman Julian Lewis protected from the spectre of investigat­ion and reinvestig­ation for events that happened many years, and often decades, earlier.”

His committee’s report last year called for the enactment of the legal statute covering all incidents during the Northern Ireland conflict up to the signing of the 1998 Belfast Agreement which involved former members of the Armed Forces.

Committee members said they were disappoint­ed and surprised that the Northern Ireland Office’s consultati­on on addressing the legacy of decades of violence did not reflect their recommenda­tions.

Backbench MPs have led a vociferous campaign for a statute of limitation­s to end what they claim is a “witch-hunt” against members of the armed forces.

Prime Minister Theresa May has said the treatment of Northern Ireland veterans was unfair, while Northern Ireland’s former Director of Public Prosecutio­ns (DPP) Barra McGrory said soldiers were not treated unfairly.

Paramilita­ries were responsibl­e for most of the killings in Northern Ireland.

Official statistics for prosecutio­ns show a minority involved the army.

Mr Lewis added: “The Government has a moral duty to defend those who served in the defence of our country, whether that was in Northern Ireland, Iraq or Afghanista­n.

“Even veterans of the Falklands campaign in 1982 have told me that they, too, could be targeted.

“It simply cannot be right that veterans, who were the subject of investigat­ions at the time of the events in question and subsequent­ly cleared, are now living in fear of re-investigat­ions and the threat of prosecutio­ns.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland