This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It will not be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/rss/-/1/hi/uk/6468171.stm
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Military inquest venue to change | Military inquest venue to change |
(40 minutes later) | |
Inquests into the deaths of British service personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan are to be held at more locations, BBC News has learned. | Inquests into the deaths of British service personnel in Iraq and Afghanistan are to be held at more locations, BBC News has learned. |
All UK war dead are currently returned to Brize Norton, Oxfordshire, and their inquests heard in that county. | |
But from 1 April bodies will be returned to RAF Lyneham in Wiltshire, and hearings held either there, or where the dead person came from. | But from 1 April bodies will be returned to RAF Lyneham in Wiltshire, and hearings held either there, or where the dead person came from. |
Critics say the move is "foolhardy" and valuable expertise will be lost. | |
Backlog of cases | |
Last month armed forces minister Adam Ingram admitted the government should have acted sooner to clear a backlog of inquests into the deaths of soldiers killed in Iraq. | |
We have at least got now established in Oxford a centre of excellence for army deaths - and to hear that that is going to change...is very disturbing Solicitor Geraldine McCool | |
In January figures revealed that inquests still had to be held into more than a third of those killed in the Iraq conflict and into 38 deaths of service personnel in Afghanistan. | |
The Oxfordshire coroner previously handled the majority of military deaths because their bodies were flown back to RAF Brize Norton. | |
BBC Radio Four's PM programme has now learned that, starting next month, repatriation flights will be switched to Lyneham because of a two-year upgrading programme at Brize Norton. | |
Wiltshire's coroner will hold hearings into multiple deaths, and single deaths may be heard at the coroner's court closest to the deceased person's home or final resting place - in each case the Wiltshire coroner will decide how to proceed. | |
'Appalled' | |
Geraldine McCool, the solicitor who represented the family of Matty Hull, who was killed near Basra in March 2003 when a US pilot fired on his tank convoy, said she was "appalled" to learn of the decision. | |
"We have at least got now established in Oxford a centre of excellence for army deaths - and to hear that that is going to change for no good reason whatsoever is very disturbing," she told the BBC. | |
She added that spreading the workload around the country looked "initially quite attractive" but was actually "foolhardy". | |
Coroner Andrew Walker and two others were brought into Oxfordshire last May to clear a backlog of 85 cases of dead service personnel awaiting hearings. | |
Funding 'needed' | |
Shadow defence secretary Liam Fox said the backlog of cases would not be cleared by "moving the pieces about" and needed more funding. | |
He said: "There's a lot of hardship and a lot of heartache that's being endured by service families here, and the government needs to address this a little more thoroughly than they've been willing to do up 'til now." | |
The Department for Constitutional Affairs (DCA) said that no new resources had been allocated to Wiltshire, but this was under review. | |
A spokesman said Oxfordshire had done a "fantastic" job, but that relatives of service personnel had found travelling long distances difficult. | |
He added: "We are confident that any coroner can build up the same level of expertise on military inquests as Mr Walker and his colleagues did." |
Previous version
1
Next version