The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Fear plan will compromise Army’ s bases

- NEIL HENDERSON

Aplan to cut the number of armed guards at Army bases including Leuchars – in a bid to save £55 million – has sparked fears security could be compromise­d.

The Ministry of Defence (MoD) will remove 500 guards from the Military Provost Guard Service (MPGS) across the UK, replacing them with civil servants.

The MPGS consists of about 3,000 weapon-trained military personnel – 100 of them in Scotland – who are deployed to protect the Army’s bases across the UK, which also includes Fort George and Kinloss.

Duties include controllin­g entry and exit to sites, managing control room operations, patrolling site perimeters and security incident management such as dealing with suspicious packages.

The uniformed guards must have previous military experience and are trained to carry arms when required.

The 500 positions will be transferre­d to the civilian MoD Guard Service.

A source linked to the Leuchars Station Army base, where there are thought to be about 40 MPGS personnel, says staff were informed of the changes on Monday.

It is claimed they now fear base security will be “significan­tly compromise­d” – and that some soldiers may be forced to relocate.

The source added: “Staff shortages and security is already stretched at Leuchars and this move adds further strain on the station’s ability to remain protected and safe.”

Wendy Chamberlai­n, MP for North East Fife, has called for assurances from the MoD.

She said: “The security of military bases is of paramount importance.

“The government need to explain clearly the reasoning for this change, otherwise it will be seen as more evidence of the Conservati­ves cutting vital parts of the armed forces.”

A Scottish Government spokespers­on told The Courier it also wants the MoD to “offer reassuranc­e that these reductions do not impact negatively on security at these bases”.

An Army spokespers­on said those affected may be offered employment opportunit­ies at other sites across the UK that are under-strength.

The MoD insists there will not be redundanci­es; however, some guards will not be able to renew their current contracts.

The spokespers­on said: “All Army sites will continue to be manned by armed guards.

“Over the next three years we will convert approximat­ely 500 Military Provost Guard Service positions to MoD Guard Service civilian posts.

“There will be no redundanci­es and the measures will save around £55m over 10 years.”

Plans for a revamp of Leuchars, to make it the home of The Black Watch Battalion by 2029, were announced in February.

 ?? ?? SAVINGS: The MoD wants to replace a number of armed guards with civil servants.
SAVINGS: The MoD wants to replace a number of armed guards with civil servants.

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