Portsmouth News

Law protecting troops from historical court action will ‘lance boil’

Navy’s ex-head welcomes bill

- by TOM COTTERILL Defence correspond­ent tom.cotterill@thenews.co.uk

A MOVE to protect troops from vexatious battlefiel­d claims is ‘lancing a longstandi­ng boil' and keeping a promise to the military, a military chief has said.

Admiral Lord Alan West, who was head of the Royal Navy and also served as chief of defence intelligen­ce with the Labour government, has warned against some bids to change the proposed legislatio­n.

The Overseas Operations (Service Personnel and Veterans) Bill, which has already cleared the Commons, seeks to limit false and historical allegation­s arising from deployment­s by introducin­g a statutory presumptio­n against prosecutio­n.

This would make it exceptiona­l for personnel to be prosecuted five years or more after an incident.

Speaking as peers began their detailed line-by-line scrutiny of the legislatio­n, Lord West said: ‘I have no doubt whatsoever that this Bill is necessary. It’s lancing a long-standing boil and fulfilling a promise to our military.

‘It’s an issue that has proved too difficult to tackle time and time again, and it’s about time it was tackled. It must not go forward.’ He made his comments after a series of peers raised concerns over the presumptio­n against prosecutio­n.

Labour peer Lord Dubs called for it to be dropped from the legislatio­n, insisting there were already safeguards against vexatious claims.

He also warned it could see personnel end up before the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC). ‘It would be hazardous in the extreme to pass a Bill with measures in it which run the risk our servicemen and women could be prosecuted under the ICC,’ he said.

Lord Dubs said the reputation of UK armed forces was ‘second to none’ but feared they could ‘suffer’ from the proposed new laws.

Branding the Bill a ‘terrible piece of legislatio­n’, Green Party peer Baroness Jones of Moulsecoom­b argued it should be scrapped because it clashed with the whole point of the justice system, which was that ‘the guilty are found guilty and the innocent are found innocent’. But ex-Tory justice minister Lord Faulks defended the Bill, saying it did not prevent investigat­ions but would be welcomed by the armed forces.

It’s lancing a long-standing boil and fulfilling a promise to our military.

Admiral Lord Alan West

 ??  ?? NECESSARY AAdmiral Lord Alan West was formerly head of the Royal Navy
NECESSARY AAdmiral Lord Alan West was formerly head of the Royal Navy

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