The Mail on Sunday

Revealed: Gun test shows new armour may not save police and troops

- By Mark Nicol DEFENCE EDITOR

THE lives of Britain’s elite soldiers and police officers could be at risk from inadequate new body armour, a safety test carried out for The Mail on Sunday has revealed.

Safety experts said the result of our experiment on the lightweigh­t polyethyle­ne chest plates, increasing­ly being rolled out among Special Forces, Royal protection teams and anti-terrorism units was ‘alarming’.

And one serving SAS soldier said: ‘I’d sooner go into battle wearing no ballistic protection than using this plate. It shouldn’t have been brought into service.’

The Ministry of Defence and the Home Office have declared the armour safe, but there are fears the tests they used to come to that conclusion are inadequate.

‘The testing process isn’t fit for purpose so lives are being put at risk,’ said defence manufactur­er Andrew Kerr, who added that he had raised his concerns officially, but they had been ignored.

The risk comes from what’s called ‘ behind armour blunt trauma’, caused as the plate bulges into the body when it absorbs the force of a bullet, and which could cause major injury or even death.

In one of the tests we commission­ed at a Government-approved laboratory, a polyethyle­ne chest plate was put in front of part of a pig’s torso, traditiona­lly used in such tests as it has similar properties to a human body, and shot.

The impact caused severe damage, ripping into the heart. After examining photograph­s, a senior NHS trauma consultant said: ‘These are unsurvivab­le injuries. The heart has been macerated by the blunt force t rauma projected through the plate. This evidence gives genuine cause for concern.

‘There is an urgent need for further study. An enormous amount of force is pushed through the plate even though the plate stops the round. While a human heart has more protection than a pig’s heart, due to the positionin­g of the chest wall, this is still alarming.’

Yet in the same series of tests, conducted using official standards on variables such as the speed of the bullet, the armour passed MoD and Home Office safety limits.

Neither body makes public which body armour plates they use, citing security reasons, so our experts chose a make commonly worn around the world.

The first test replicated the process used by the Government when a plate is mounted in front of a clay mould and a 7.62mm round fired into it from a set distance. The depth of the indentatio­n the impact made i n the clay through the armour was 24mm – less than the 25mm maximum required by the Home Office and the 44mm MoD limit, also used by other countries.

But that same impact force was enough to cause such major damage to the pig. In comparison, tests on the heavier ceramic plates, which the plastic ones are replacing, showed there was no damage to either the clay or the pig, which had been humanely killed at an abattoir and was otherwise destined to be sold as food. Mr Kerr, a former member of the Home Office safety stand a committee, said: ‘The standards of 25mm and 44mm are entirely arbitrary, bearing no relation to injuries caused by this trauma.

‘ Considerin­g the popularity of lightweigh­t ballistic plates in elite military units and police detachment­s, more sophistica­ted tests need to be introduced quickly.’

Lee Trueman, a former police firearms officer and ballistics expert, also said the current tests were inadequate: ‘ There would appear to be no direct relationsh­ip between b t the th 25mm and 44mm standards to any human injuries.’

Che Donald, of the Police Federation, and Mark Williams, head of the Police Firearms Officers Associatio­n, last night issued a joint statement saying: ‘Anything that suggests equipment may not be fit for purpose needs to be further investigat­ed as a matter of urgency before any serious injury or loss of life.’

Calling for an i nvestigati­on, former Shadow Defence Minister John Spellar said: ‘The Mail on Sunday’s findings clearly show the need for a rapid review and update of safety standards to save lives.’

A Government spokesman said: ‘We take the safety of our police officers and Armed Forces extremely seriously.

‘The MoD and Home Office procure various types of body armour, all of which are rigorously assessed using internatio­nally recognised test standards with the relevant roles and threat level in mind. We have not seen any evidence to indicate that the current standards do not provide adequate protection.’

‘I’d rather go into battle with no armour than this’

 ??  ?? AT RISK? Counter-terrorism officers are increasing­ly using the chest plates that we tested on pig meat, left, with ‘alarming’ results
AT RISK? Counter-terrorism officers are increasing­ly using the chest plates that we tested on pig meat, left, with ‘alarming’ results
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 ??  ?? IMPACT: Clay damaged when protected from 7.62mm bullets, above, by the armour
IMPACT: Clay damaged when protected from 7.62mm bullets, above, by the armour
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