Independent Media Centre Ireland     http://www.indymedia.ie

UK soldiers going Awol has trebled since the Iraq war

category galway | anti-war / imperialism | other press author Sunday March 19, 2006 18:49author by Dunlo T - Cosantoiri Siochana

Le'ts hope it's the trickle before the flood ?.

In today's Independent on Sunday (UK), Severin Carrell reveals that the number of soldiers absconding from the British Army has trebled since the invasion of Iraq, raising fears that the military is facing a crisis in moral

Military lawyers and campaigners said that these figures suggested significant levels of disaffection in the ranks over the legality of the occupation, and growing discontent about the coalition's failure to defeat the Iraqi insurgency.

An RAF doctor was last week taken to a court martial for refusing to serve in Iraq, claiming the occupation is illegal, and a former SAS trooper, Ben Griffin, revealed he had quit the army in protest at the war.

Mr Griffin was among the 20,000 anti-war protesters, including a number of families of serving soldiers, who marched in London yesterday to mark the third anniversary of the war in Iraq.

Ministers are planning to tackle the "refusenik" problem by introducing a new draconian definition of desertion in the Armed Forces Bill now going through Parliament. Soldiers could now face life imprisonment if they refuse to take part in the occupation of a foreign country - a move thought to be directly linked to concerns over Iraq.

Figures released by the MoD show that over the past five years the number of soldiers who have gone Awol and failed to rejoin their units has steadily increased, rising from 86 in 2001 to 118 in 2002 and then 135 in 2003, when the Iraq war began.

.

Gilbert Blades, a leading military lawyer, claimed the true extent of absenteeism and the "refusenik" problem was being disguised by the military. "If they played up the problem with absenteeism, that wouldn't be good for morale. So the MoD isn't keen on putting any emphasis on the fact that people don't want to fight in what they think is an illegal war," Mr Blade said.

He said the Government's decision to tighten up the definition of desertion was "pretty obviously" an attempt by ministers to stop people from refusing to serve in Iraq.

Gwyn Gwyntopher, a counsellor with At Ease, a charity that advises soldiers on their rights to leave the army, said this tougher definition of desertion was a "very big jump" in military law. "It's now happening in such sufficient numbers that someone in the MoD wants to legislate specifically for it," she said.

Related Link: http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article352181.ece

Comments (1 of 1)

Jump To Comment: 1
author by Dunlo T - Cosantoiri Siochanapublication date Sun Mar 19, 2006 19:57author address author phone

Democracy Now is reporting that the U.S. is now jailing "Vietnam War Resisters 40 Years After They Refused to Serve"

Concerned about growing desertion and resistance within the military, the U.S. government is now putting the frighteners on contemporary would-be deserters by arresting and jailing men who refused to fight a generation ago in the Vietnam War - Democracy Now talks to one of them.

Related Link: http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/03/15/159201


Indymedia Ireland is a media collective. We are independent volunteer citizen journalists producing and distributing the authentic voices of the people. Indymedia Ireland is an open news project where anyone can post their own news, comment, videos or photos about Ireland or related matters.