Charity demands MPS take action on recording ex-military suicides
● Lack of such data on veterans hampers services, say charities
A charity has called for a change in the law to settle a row at the heart of the UK government and make monitoring the rate of suicides among British military veterans compulsory.
An investigation last year by The Scotsman and its sister titles within the JPI Media group revealed figures for former service personnel taking their own lives which are available to the Scottish and Westminster governments are withheld from scrutiny by the general public.
The absence of official records of suicides among Britain’s 2.6 million military veterans led to ministers being accused of turning “a blind eye” to concerns. The US, Australia and Canada record the number of veteran suicides andcampaignersaredemanding the UK follows suit.
Defence minister Tobias Ellwood announced last November that the UK government would begin a study into suicide rates among veterans who had served in Iraq and Afghanistan.
But the JPI Media investigations team can now reveal a row at the heart of Westminster over the issue, with the Ministry of Justice (MOJ) rejecting an Ministry of Defence plan to force coroners to log such statistics. MPS on the Commons defence select committee have also been keenly pursuing the issue of military mental health, publishing their first report last July.
It recommended that the Ministry of Defence (MOD) work with the justice departments across the four UK nations to work out from existing suicide records whether someone had been a veteran.
A second report by the committee, due to be published on Monday, is expected to further press for progress.
Dr Walter Busuttil, medical director of veterans’ mental health charity Combat Stress, said it was up to MPS to step in and make it a statutory responsibility to record veteran suicides. He said: “If they want to record things properly then they are going to have to change the law.”
However, the MOJ said
it was too complex for coroners to record deal with, in particular because of the potential difficulties of accurately establishing a victim’s occupational history.
An MOD spokeswoman said: “We take the well-being of all those who have served extremely seriously and we are currently considering how we can better understand the cohort of veterans who take their own lives.”
Last week Mr Ellwood, a former captain in the Royal Green Jackets, offered a public apology to the grieving families of veterans and serving personnel who took their lives this year and last.