Western Mail

Military policemen familes’ call for fresh inquest rejected

- Thomas Deacon Reporter thomas.deacon@walesonlin­e.co.uk

Acall by the families of four military policemen killed in Iraq for a fresh inquest into their deaths has been rejected by the Government’s chief legal adviser.

Lance Corporal Tom Keys, 20, from Llanuwchll­yn, near Bala, died in June 2003 along with Corporals Russell Aston, 30, and Simon Miller, 21, Lance Corporal Benjamin McGowan Hyde, 23, Sergeant Simon Hamilton-Jewell, 41, and Corporal Paul Long, 24.

The four military policemen were killed when a 400-strong mob descended on a police station in Majar al-Kabir in Iraq back in June 2003.

In 2014 their families wrote to Attorney General Jeremy Wright seeking leave to apply to the High Court for a new inquest based on the grounds that fresh evidence had come to light which suggested that their deaths could have been prevented.

However, in a statement, Mr Wright said he had concluded that none of the grounds of challenge set out had a reasonable “prospect of success” and he could not therefore authorise a referral to the High Court.

“I offer my deepest sympathy to the families for their loss – and my gratitude for the sacrifices that their sons made for this country,” he said.

“I have given this matter considerab­le thought but, as disappoint­ing as it will be for the families involved, it would not be right to pass this matter to the High Court when the tests for a new inquest are not met.”

Tom Key’s father Reg Keys, who at the time of his Royal Military Policeman (RMP) son’s death was living in Llanuwchll­yn, near Bala, in north Wales, had previously stood against Tony Blair ar the 2005 General Election and has long campaigned for answers to questions about Iraq.

The original inquest in March 2006 found that the four Red Caps, as military police officers are known, had all been unlawfully killed.

Oxfordshir­e Coroner Nicholas Gardiner wrote to the Government expressing concern about the lack of ammunition issued to the men, inadequate communicat­ions and the roadworthi­ness of the vehicles they were driving.

However a dossier of new evidence from two former soldiers was submitted to Mr Wright in support of a claim that there was intelligen­ce from GCHQ - the secret electronic “listening” agency - that an attack was imminent and could have been used to prevent the men’s deaths.

Lawyers representi­ng the families said the informatio­n came from a former SAS lieutenant colonel, known as Colonel X, and another former officer identified as Captain T.

In addition, it has been claimed that four of the Red Caps had been captured by the mob and were later executed by an insurgent called Rufeiq, a known target of the allied forces.

 ??  ?? > Tom Keys was killed in Iraq in 2003
> Tom Keys was killed in Iraq in 2003

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