Daily Mail

HOUNDING OF A HERO

It beggars belief: A British officer who’s defused bombs, been crippled in battle and decorated for valour... yet is now being investigat­ed for the EIGHTH time over the death of an Iraqi 16 years ago. Is it any wonder Army recruitmen­t is in crisis?

- by Richard Pendlebury

ROBERT CAMPBELL meets me at the railway station in the provincial town where he lives. He said he’d be easy to recognise — and he was right. Just 46 years old, he has hearing aids and walks stiffly with the help of a stick.

He struggles with mental health issues, suffers failing eyesight and needs both hips replaced. And he not only feels abandoned by the very organisati­on he used to call ‘home’ — but hunted down.

This highly decorated former major in the Royal Engineers finds himself in a situation that, even by the lamentable standards of our military’s duty of care, is surely unique.

Mr Campbell is now in his 17th year under suspicion for the ‘murder’ of an Iraqi teenager who drowned in a river in the city of Basra in May 2003. Eight official investigat­ions have taken place into his alleged role in the death of 19yearold Said Shabram, for which Mr Campbell and two other former soldiers in the Royal Engineers deny any culpabilit­y.

On seven occasions, he has been cleared of all blame and told ‘case closed’ — only for inquiries to be reopened soon afterwards. During this time, he was deployed to fight on four tours of Afghanista­n.

The eighth investigat­ion — by a Ministry of Defence quango called the Iraq Fatality Investigat­ions (IFI) — is likely to drag on for years after the retired High Court judge leading it died in June. He will be replaced, and the Campbell case will have to start all over again.

‘I’m in a horrendous kind of limbo,’ says Mr Campbell. ‘I’m not aware of another case that has been quite so hashed over.’

Ranged against him have been the Royal Military Police, investigat­ors from the nowdefunct Iraq Historic Allegation­s Team, Iraqis determined to win compensati­on, a corrupt human rights lawyer, and a Ministry of Defence that, he claims, sought to protect politician­s and military officers responsibl­e for the disaster in Iraq by throwing innocent soldiers to the wolves.

Mr Campbell speaks with a fluency born of passion at the injustice he has suffered and the incredulit­y of what he has endured. His story is both gripping and shameful.

Robert Campbell was a lieutenant in 32 Engineer Regiment when the ground phase of Operation Iraqi Freedom began in March 2003.

He was attached to the Black Watch Battle Group and found himself in Basra, a city gripped by a murderous anarchy for which the British occupation force was singularly unprepared.

The ‘unlawful killing’ incident took place against this backdrop on May 24.

Mr Campbell says he and three of his soldiers — a corporal, a lance corporal and a sapper — were washing two armoured vehicles on the bank of the Shatt alArab river, 500 yards from the unit’s base.

Given the uncertaint­y of his ongoing legal position, Mr Campbell feels he must be circumspec­t about describing what happened. ‘All I am prepared to say is that me and one of my soldiers almost drowned trying to fish him [the dead youth] out.

‘No one pushed anyone into the river . . . We were witnesses to rough justice being meted out by locals and those two guys jumped in the river to escape.’

The other boy — the dead man’s cousin — survived.

‘We went back to our camp and briefly told the adjutant what had happened,’ says Mr Campbell. ‘Because one of my sappers and I had gone into the river, we were sent to Battle Group HQ to be seen by the doctor. The water was foul with oil and sewage. By the time we got back to camp, a crowd of locals had gathered at the gates and it was pretty hostile.

‘We volunteere­d to our people what had happened. If we had done anything wrong, we could quite easily have driven away and denied any knowledge. But we reported to our chain of command.’

The written report they made that day is the statement they stand by almost 17 years later.

During the following weeks, allegation­s were made by locals against the engineers.

‘The Royal Military Police began to interview other people in our squadron — who had not been present — but did not interview us,’ says Mr Campbell. ‘They said they would do it when we got back to our base in Germany. At that stage, it just seemed to be a formality.’

The allegation was that Lieutenant Campbell and his men had killed the teenager by ‘wetting’ — a term allegedly used to describe the practice of putting Iraqis who were looting or engaged in some other disorder into the river. The two youths had been forced at gunpoint off a jetty, it was claimed. Mr Campbell denies this vehemently. ‘Phil Shiner — the human rights lawyer who was later struck off for dishonesty — first came up with the phrase of “wetting” as far as I was concerned, and he tried to make it out to be a common British Army punishment,’ he says. ‘I had never heard the phrase until I heard him say it years later.’

The engineers deployed back to their base in Germany that July. Nothing more was said.

Then, in early 2004, Mr Campbell was on a course in the UK when he was told he had to return to Germany immediatel­y to be interviewe­d by the Special Investigat­ion Branch. A number of alleged ‘atrocities’ by British troops in Iraq were emerging.

‘It had become very political,’ he says. ‘The zeitgeist was to investigat­e everything, however flimsy.’

He says the military police were ‘very profession­al. No malice. We were interviewe­d twice. They said: “There is a chance you might be reported for murder or manslaught­er.” But we did not take it seriously. It was absurd’.

At first, all four soldiers were treated as suspects. Then the most junior was told he would be a witness. ‘They hoped he would “spill the beans” about the rest of us. But he had no beans to spill,’ he says. By this time, there were signs they were being officially ostracised. They had their Iraq campaign medals withheld and were not included in that year’s regimental photograph.

Months passed. The three ‘suspects’ were told they would be facing court martial. But first, the evidence would be examined by a second inquiry team.

In April 2006, Captain Campbell — he’d been promoted the previous year — and his men returned to Iraq with their legal team for what is called a Formal Preliminar­y Investigat­ion, conducted in a hangar at Basra airport.

In two days, the Crown’s case ‘folded’. The witnesses did not bear scrutiny. The following day, the men’s campaign medals, supposedly lost due to an administra­tive error, were found and handed to the cleared soldiers ‘in Jiffy bags’.

But at least the cloud was dispersed. ‘I was told: “It’s over. Get on with your lives.”

‘We were welcomed back into the “good lads club”. I was asked what posting I wanted, which I took as acknowledg­ement they had f***** up. And I so said EOD [bomb disposal].’

Mr Campbell did his first tour of Afghanista­n in 200607, commandR

‘I am in a horrendous kind of limbo’ ‘Investigat­ors asked my ex if I was a racist’

‘I had a physical and mental breakdown’

ing a bomb disposal squadron. despite bitter fighting and the constant threat of Ieds, he did not lose any men and, when he returned, was awarded a Joint Commanders Commendati­on.

other plaudits followed. In June 2008, he defused a 1,000 kg Luftwaffe bomb on an olympic constructi­on site in London. It took 20 hours. He received a letter of thanks from then- London mayor boris Johnson and was awarded a Commander-in-Chief Commendati­on. ‘I appeared to be back on track,’ he says.

but then, driving home, he heard on the radio that the army had published the aitken report: an Investigat­ion into Cases of deliberate abuse and Unlawful Killing in Iraq in 2003 and 2004.

mr Campbell had not known that an investigat­ion had been under way. He was then called by the unit adjutant who said that Campbell’s basra case was one of those included. He was told: ‘don’t worry, it’s just a Pr exercise. no one will read it.’ How wrong he was. ‘What the dimwits at the mod didn’t grasp was that Phil Shiner and other lawyers like him grabbed this report and said: “brilliant!” they took it as an admission of guilt and used it as source material to round up all the witnesses for future legal actions,’ he says.

It was the catalyst for a tidal wave of spurious accusation­s.

Yet, when he returned to afghanista­n in July 2010, mr Campbell believed the basra allegation­s were at last behind him.

‘but then I got an email from one of my co-accused who said he had received a letter from the treasury Solicitor’s department — the government’s legal team.

‘another human rights law firm active in Iraqi cases had filed a suit claiming unlawful death on behalf of [Said Shabram’s] family against the mod. they wanted us to make more statements.’

mr Campbell took legal advice and was told to make no further statement, a position that he has maintained to this day.

the government settled out of court with the family. ‘I believe they paid £100,000 to the family of the dead man and £ 45,000 to the guy who did not drown,’ says mr Campbell. In making the payments, the mod denied any liability for the death.

He later discovered that, while in afghanista­n, the royal military Police started another criminal investigat­ion into him over the incident. ‘It was dropped, but can you believe the duplicity of it?’ he asks now.

Later during that tour — for which he received a nato meritoriou­s Service medal — he suffered the injuries that plague him to this day. Caught on the roof of a two- storey building in a firefight in which two of his men were killed, he jumped for his life. Wearing 60 kg of kit, the impact on landing smashed vertebrae and damaged his hips. He was flown home.

‘now I knew I was struggling,’ he says. ‘ my back was wrecked, my hearing was going and I started to have mental health problems.’

In January 2012, he ‘pretty much had a physical and mental breakdown. I was diagnosed with PtSd. they told me “go home” and then just forgot about me’.

there was no contact with the army for four months, during which ‘I wasn’t coping’, he says.

eventually, he recovered enough to be sent on attachment to the raF, where he was deployed twice more to afghanista­n and, in 2014, promoted to the rank of major.

then came the next legal blow. ‘at end of 2014, I was on my way on holiday to Iceland when my mobile rang. It was my ex-girlfriend, who said: “there are two police here asking about the incident in Iraq . . .” they were trying that old copper’s trick of going to an ex-partner, hoping for animosity. b but we got on — and she told m me everything.

‘and they were not actually policemen. they were civilian investigat­ors from IHat [the Iraq Historic allegation­s team].’

the team had been set up by the Labour government ‘to review and investigat­e allegation­s of abuse of Iraqi civilians by UK armed forces personnel in Iraq’. It received more than 3,000 allegation­s of unlawful d death in total. one concerned mr C Campbell’s case.

‘they asked my ex if I was a r racist, alcoholic or violent. they kept trying to make her say bad things. She didn’t even know me in 2003. When I came back from holiday, I found that IHat had contacted everyone in the army who had contact with me.’

mr Campbell was, at this stage, studying at staff college. His mental health relapsed.

‘IHat investigat­ors monitored my emails and asked my bank for my financial details. the army handed over my service and medical records without telling me, let alone asking permission, then denied they had done so before finally admitting it.

‘What were they going to find that was of any evidential use? but they had no checks and balances. they were out of control. and the contractor­s (most of the IHat staff were civilian by then) were being paid by the hour and raking it in.

‘ the sapper who had been present on the day of the incident had left the army and moved to australia. IHat visited him there twice. great for them!’

eventually, the three accused were interviewe­d under caution at civilian police stations.

‘they asked me a lot of stupid questions,’ recalls mr Campbell. ‘I could see their notes and they kept writing: “Clarify with PIL” — Public Interest Lawyers, the name of Phil Shiner’s firm. they were getting directions from him.’

PIL had the best contacts on the ground in Iraq.

mr Campbell says he had another mental breakdown and his physical injuries were deteriorat­ing. He took sick leave in February 2016 and never went back. He returned his campaign medals to the Queen.

IHat handed over his case to the director Service Prosecutio­ns (an organisati­on within the mod), the

sixth investigat­or. In September 2016, the director decreed there was no case to answer. ‘I was told once again to “forget it. It [was] finished.” ’ But, of course, it wasn’t. A month later, while at the military rehabilita­tion centre at Headley Court in Surrey, where he was diagnosed with a brain injury, Mr Campbell learned the decision to drop the case had been challenged. The dead Iraqi’s family wanted it to be reviewed.

So for the seventh time, the case was investigat­ed by a new prosecutor. In January 2018, he, too, concluded there was no case to answer.

By then, the tide had turned against the Iraqi atrocity compensati­on industry. Phil Shiner was facing serious profession­al disciplina­ry proceeding­s. His firm, PIL, closed in August 2016 and he was struck off as a solicitor after being found guilty of multiple profession­al misconduct charges, including dishonesty and lack of integrity.

IHAT was closed down, having spent £34 million of taxpayers’ money and been thoroughly discredite­d. It failed to secure a single prosecutio­n.

But, by then, Mr Campbell learned his case was being scrutinise­d — for the eighth time — by the Iraq Fatality Investigat­ions, set up in 2014 to carry out inquiries into civilian deaths linked to Britain’s military in Iraq.

The IFI was led by retired High Court judge Sir George Newman, who was paid £900 a day. But Sir George died in June.

‘The MoD have not yet advertised for his successor,’ says Mr Campbell. ‘I’m told they are working on the theory that Boris Johnson might want to make changes.’

He says the Government has promised them that any evidence they give will not be used to prosecute them, either in the UK or at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague.

‘But the assurances they give us are complete bull****,’ he says. ‘The MoD says that if they don’t investigat­e, the ICC will. But I have been told by the chief prosecutor at the ICC that their remit is to prosecute commanders and political leaders, not individual soldiers like me.’

Which, of course, brings us to what lurks behind this extraordin­ary case: the question of overall responsibi­lity for the disastrous war in Iraq.

‘The people the ICC would be interested in are Tony Blair, [former Defence Secretary] Geoff Hoon, and the generals — not a lieutenant in 32 Engineer Regiment,’ says Mr Campbell.

‘I am convinced that IHAT was set up to divert the blame away from senior figures.’

Mr Campbell was medically discharged from the Army in May 2018 and feels abandoned. ‘ They said: “This investigat­ion could take years. Off you go.” ’ But where? He cannot work because of his health and he has a wife and eightmonth-old son to support.

So far, the Army has decreed he is only 14 per cent disabled and so he gets an ill-health pension ‘less than one-third of my Army pay’.

Speaking yesterday, an MoD spokesman said: ‘ We recognise the significan­t impact that investigat­ions into historical allegation­s can have on members of the Armed Forces and veterans.

‘ That’s why we are consulting on a package of new measures, including a presumptio­n against prosecutio­n, to ensure that service personnel and veterans are not subject to legal proceeding­s many years after alleged events and where there is no new evidence.’

Meanwhile, Robert Campbell’s fight to clear his name goes on. It is the hardest battle he has fought.

‘They said: “This could take years. Off you go...” ‘

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 ??  ?? On patrol: Major Robert Campbell. Above: Iraqi teenager Said Shabram
On patrol: Major Robert Campbell. Above: Iraqi teenager Said Shabram

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