The Daily Telegraph

Soldier’s widow ‘left in the dark’ over husband’s death

- By Daily Telegraph Reporter

THE widow of a British soldier hit by a car driven by a US serviceman on an RAF base in Cyprus has spoken of wanting “truth, justice and accountabi­lity” over his death.

Colour Sergeant Anthony Oxley, who had served in Iraq and Afghanista­n, was on deployment in June 2016 when he was involved in the crash at the RAF Akrotiri base.

The 40-year-old, from Ryhill, near Wakefield, West Yorkshire, was riding a motorbike when he collided with a Toyota Corolla driven by a US serviceman and he later died at a Cypriot hospital.

His widow Sally said she has been left in the dark about the details of how he died.

Mrs Oxley’s comments come after a ruling in December from a judge, sitting as a coroner in a district court in Nicosia, regarding an inquest into Mr Oxley’s death. The judge indicated Colour Sgt Oxley’s route was impeded or blocked, according to her lawyers.

A 2018 inquest in the UK recorded a narrative verdict, that Colour Sgt Oxley’s death had been caused by multiple blunt force injuries to his head, as a result of a road traffic collision. But Mrs Oxley, who lives in Barnsley, has been pushing for a new inquest in Cyprus to look into witness accounts. Mrs Oxley described herself as “very pleased with the initial interpreta­tion” of the inquest verdict.

She added: “The proceeding­s in Nicosia have at last started to establish the truth, justice and accountabi­lity about the death of my husband, and the father of our children, ‘The Ox’, which I have been striving for eight years now.”

Mrs Oxley said she will now speak to her lawyers to see what next legal steps should be taken. KRW Law, which represents Mrs Oxley, said the US Air Force took charge of the investigat­ion and few details were made public, even though Colour Sgt Oxley’s death happened within British sovereign territory.

The law firm is waiting for a certified translatio­n of the coroner’s verdict given in the court in Nicosia.

Among the evidence reviewed at that hearing was forensic material and witness statements, including maps of the topography of the collision terrain, the lawyers said.

‘The proceeding­s have at last started to establish the truth and justice about the death of my husband’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom