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Hundreds attend soldier's funeral | |
(about 3 hours later) | |
Hundreds of mourners have packed a small stone church and its grounds to pay tribute to a teenage soldier. | |
The congregation was told how Rifleman Aaron Lincoln, 18, of Durham, gave his life for his colleagues during a close quarters gun battle in Basra, Iraq. | |
Rifleman Lincoln of the Sherburn Road Estate had been serving with the 2nd Battalion, the Rifles. | |
About 700 mourners attended the service at Durham's St Giles Church. He died on 2 April on a routine security patrol. | |
Mourners were told how the young soldier, who had only been in Iraq since January, was out with his platoon when they came under fire. | |
They were in the Al Ashar district of central Basra, near Basra Palace, and another of the patrol was also wounded. | |
Rifleman Lincoln tried to get into the building from where the shots were thought to have been fired but he was hit with small arms fire from another direction. | |
He was a wonderful young Rifleman, caring and committed, who loved soldiering and he was very good at it Army tribute | |
Both wounded men were taken to Basra Palace and then to the field hospital at Basra Air Station for further treatment but Rifleman Lincoln later died of his injuries. | |
Mourners stood in silence as his coffin, draped in the Union Flag, was carried up a winding gravel path at the church. | |
A tannoy system was set up to relay the service to the hundreds of mourners who could not get inside the small stone church, which holds 350. | |
The church bells rang at noon as the police-escorted cortege arrived at the church entrance and the service got under way with the hymn, How Great Thou Art. | |
It was jointly conducted by Canon Richard Davison and Catterick Garrison Chaplain Ray McKnight. | |
The congregation heard how the soldier "ultimately sacrificed his life for his friends". | |
Rifleman Lincoln was proud of his family's military history | |
An Army tribute included the words: "He was a wonderful young Rifleman, caring and committed, who loved soldiering and he was very good at it." | |
His parents Peter and Karen led the coffin into the church supporting each other. | |
Rifleman Lincoln, who had two sisters and one brother, had followed a long family tradition by joining the Army just a year ago. | |
His grandfather served with the local Durham Light Infantry and he was said by colleagues to be fiercely proud of his family's military heritage. | |
Following the 40-minute service the family left for a private ceremony at nearby Belmont Cemetery. | |
Private Lincoln was the 105th soldier to die in the conflict. The total now stands at 110. |