Coventry Telegraph

Coventry Para honoured for heroic actions

- By JASPREET KAUR News Reporter

A PARATROOPE­R from Coventry is being recognised in the latest Operationa­l Awards list for his outstandin­g bravery and selflessne­ss during the evacuation of British nationals and eligible Afghans from Kabul last summer.

Corporal Jamie Found, 32, of 2 PARA, receives a Queen’s Commendati­on for Valuable Service (QCVS).

Jamie went to Coundon Court School in Coventry and is one of three Colchester-based paratroope­rs cited for their roles in the Evacuee

Handling Centre at Kabul Airport.

Thousands of people desperatel­y tried to flee when a suicide bomb detonated killing dozens including US troops.

Operation Pitting, as the British mission was known, saw personnel deploy at very short notice to support the evacuation effort.

Corporal Found, a Rifle Section Commander with C Company, 2 PARA, is being awarded the QCVS for his brave work preventing people from being crushed as they surged towards the Evacuee Handling Centre.

Jamie led his team into the crowd, pushing them back and forming a protective barrier to hold the line. His citation reads: “For hours he commanded the action at the shield wall, revealing himself above the crowd whilst nervy and tense Taliban fighters observed from mere feet away. Providing hands-on management of his personnel, he reinforced the baseline himself when it was most vulnerable, enabling it to hold for more than three hours before relief eventually arrived.”

Corporal Found was surprised to have been selected for an award. He said: “It’s a privilege. I feel honoured that I’ve been nominated to stand out from everyone else who I was working alongside out there. To be honest, I feel that everyone did such a good job that you can’t really separate what I did from everyone else I worked alongside.”

For Corporal Found, taking part in Operation Pitting ‘felt like we were a part of history.’ He said: “It was an operation we’ve not really seen before - not the norm we would train for. We’ve done public order training to prepare us for certain situations but for the humanitari­an side of it, I don’t think there’s any way you can train for that.

“It was quite surreal once we did get out there. And, we didn’t know what to expect as well, that was a challenge.”

Being part of the Parachute Regiment, the paratroope­rs pride themselves on being ready to deploy at short notice.

“We can be called to go anywhere in the world. It’s something we’re used to and prepared for,” said Corporal Found, who joined the Army 12 years ago.

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