Ex-British soldier pleads not guilty to 'Bloody Sunday' murders after
judge clears the way for trial
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[December 07, 2024]
By DANICA KIRKA
LONDON (AP) — A former British soldier will be tried for the murder of
two men killed during the 1972 “Bloody Sunday” disturbances in
Londonderry, Northern Ireland’s second-biggest city, after a judge
refused to dismiss the charges against him.
The veteran, known only as Soldier F, is charged with two counts of
murder and five counts of attempted murder stemming from a civil rights
march and the rioting that followed it on Jan. 30, 1972. Thirteen people
were killed by British Army gunfire that day, the largest number of
deaths in a shooting incident during three decades of violence in
Northern Ireland known as “The Troubles.”
During a hearing Friday at Belfast Crown Court, Justice Stephen Fowler
rejected an application from the ex-soldier’s lawyers to dismiss the
charges on the grounds that there wasn’t enough evidence to convict him.
Following the ruling, Soldier F pleaded not guilty. The veteran entered
his plea from behind a blue floor-to-ceiling curtain after the judge
granted a request to shield his identity. The veteran’s lawyers had
argued that he would be a “prized target” for dissident Irish
Republicans if his identity were made public.
The judge said he expected the trial to take place early next year and
scheduled the next hearing in the case for Jan. 24.
Soldier F is the only British Army veteran to face trial for the Bloody
Sunday killings after years of investigations and aborted efforts to
bring charges against the former soldiers.
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In this February 1972 file photo, a building burns in the bogside
district of Londonderry, Northern Ireland, in the aftermath of
Bloody Sunday. (AP Photo/Michel Laurent, File)
The first government-commissioned inquiry, published less than three
months after the deaths, found that the soldiers had only opened
fire after they had been fired upon. A second inquiry in 2010
rejected that conclusion, finding that the soldiers violated their
rules of engagement and opened fire on people who didn’t pose a
threat to them. That cleared the way for the prosecution of Soldier
F.
Bloody Sunday remains a source of tension in Northern Ireland more
than 25 years after the peace agreement that largely ended the
Troubles. Families of the victims continue to demand justice for
their loved ones, while supporters of army veterans who fought in
the conflict complain that they continue to be dogged by
investigations and potential charges decades after their service
ended.
Outside the court, Mickey McKinney, the brother of one of the men
killed in 1972, said it was a “good day” for the victims and their
families.
“The events of Bloody Sunday took place 53 years ago next month,” he
said. “It is imperative that the court does not tolerate any more
delay and that this trial proceeds as a matter of urgency.”
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