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'Failings' behind death of marine | 'Failings' behind death of marine |
(20 minutes later) | |
A coroner hearing the case of a Royal Marine killed by "friendly fire" in Iraq has ruled his death was caused by serious failings by the military. | A coroner hearing the case of a Royal Marine killed by "friendly fire" in Iraq has ruled his death was caused by serious failings by the military. |
Christopher Maddison, 24, from Scarborough, was killed by his own side during a river patrol in 2003. | |
Coroner Andrew Walker said the marine, based in Plymouth, had been let down by those in command. | |
Mr Maddison's mother said the Ministry of Defence had failed in its duty of care to her son. | |
Oxford Coroner's Court heard missiles were fired at the marine's boat after Royal Engineers soldiers manning a crossing point upriver were told they were being approached by two enemy craft. | |
Chain of command | |
Mr Maddison died from shrapnel wounds inflicted by a missile fired from the crossing point on the Khawr Az Zubayr river in southern Iraq. | |
Recording a narrative verdict, Mr Walker said there were serious failures in the chain of command at the crossing point. | |
The lack of duty of care to possible risks and consequences effectively created an obvious chain of events which could have led to further loss of life Julie Maddison, mother | |
He also said there had been a failure to provide a liaison officer to keep soldiers at the crossing updated of the patrol's whereabouts, and a failure to provide adequate communication between the crossing point and the two patrolling craft. | |
He said Mr Maddison was "was let down by those who were in command and by the communication system in operation at that time". | |
In a statement, the marine's mother, Julie Maddison, said leadership had fallen "far below" what could reasonably have been expected. | |
She said: "The lack of duty of care to possible risks and consequences even I, as a lay person, could have foreseen, effectively created an obvious chain of events which could have led to further loss of life." |