Former UK Soldier Dies On Trial Over 1974 N.Ireland Shooting
A former British soldier accused over the fatal shooting of
a vulnerable man during unrest in Northern Ireland has died while on trial, a
veteran's organisation said on Monday.
Dennis Hutchings, 80, was on trial at Belfast Crown Court
over the 1974 killing of John Pat Cunningham during "The Troubles" in
Northern Ireland.
The trial was adjourned on Monday after Hutchings, already
suffering serious kidney disease, contracted Covid-19.
On Monday night the Northern Ireland Veteran's Movement
(NIVM) said on Twitter the ex-soldier "passed away" at the Mater
Infirmorum Hospital in Belfast.
Hutchings' case has been a lightning rod for controversy,
demonstrating the highly charged legacy of Britain's military intervention in
Northern Ireland.
British lawmaker Jeffrey Donaldson -- the leader of Northern
Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) -- said Hutchings was "dragged
to a court and hounded until his death".
"He was an 80-year-old veteran, in ill-health, on
dialysis and there was a lack of compelling new evidence," Donaldson said
in a statement.
He questioned how the trial was "deemed to be in the
public interest".
Hutchings stood accused of the attempted murder of
Cunningham -- a 27-year-old with severe learning disabilities who was shot dead
as he ran from an army patrol in rural County Tyrone.
The court previously heard Hutchings and another
now-deceased soldier opened fire, and how the lack of ballistics evidence
proving which rounds killed Cunningham meant Hutchings was accused of attempted
murder.
About 3,500 people were killed in "The Troubles"
as tensions between pro-Ireland nationalists and pro-UK unionists boiled over.
The British army was deployed on peacekeeping duties,
however over its 38-year deployment the military was deemed responsible by many
for some of the bloodiest chapters of the conflict.
Prosecution for deaths at the hands of the military remains
a politically volatile topic in Northern Ireland and across Britain.
Families of those killed by the armed forces say they have
been denied justice against soldiers representing the authority of the state.
Soldiers who served in Northern Ireland argue that they are
being hounded into old age and infirmity.
Veterans also complain there is an imbalance of justice as
security forces were responsible for only 10 per cent of killings during the
period but 30 per cent of Police Service of Northern Ireland legacy
investigations are focused on them.
The British government has pledged to soon bring forward an
amnesty for killings on all sides, meaning Hutchings' case could be one of the
last to go before the courts.
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