Families challenge MoD and Prime Minister in London

British Prime Minister Theresa May warned the recent Tory party conference about what she called: "… activist, left-wing human rights lawyers [who] harangue and harass the bravest of the brave – the men and women of Britain’s Armed Forces". She also vowed to defend soldiers against "vexatious allegations" arising from conflicts including those in N. Ireland, Iraq and Afghanistan. A number of Irish families are hitting back with a week-long publicity campaign on the streets of London highlighting the appalling way they were treated following the killings of their loved-ones by British soldiers.

An Ad Van* will circulate through central London between Tuesday Nov 15 and Saturday Nov 19 focussing on the cases of Christopher Quinn, a father of five children, and 12-year-old Kevin Heatley, both shot dead by soldiers.

Declassified MoD documents (copies available on request) reveal that only £500 was paid to the Quinn family despite internal MoD advice that the case was valued at £10,000. The family of Kevin Heatley was offered a derisory £750 because this was ‘the acceptable rate for a minor’, according to the MoD.

Roberta Quinn, daughter of Christopher, said:

"My mother was left to raise five children and scrape to make ends meet after my father’s shooting. How dare Theresa May talk about ‘vexatious allegations’ when we see the MoD was prepared to drag my mother through the courts and ended up paying her a miserly £500 knowing that my father was an innocent man?"

Kevin Heatley’s brother, Martin, asked:

"Who could have been so cruel and heartless to say that the ‘acceptable rate for a minor’ shot in the head by a soldier, was £750? This was the final blow for my parents. The MoD offered us about £60 for each year Kevin lived. What an insult".

Paul O’Connor of the PFC (the NGO sponsoring the week long advert) added:

"These two selected cases are just the tip of the iceberg. We support another family where £84.07 was offered after soldiers shot a mother-of-six. (Kathleen Thompson, November 1971) and another where £750 was paid to the family of a 27-year-old vulnerable adult, John Patrick Cunningham, described in the Regimental Log of the Life Guards Regiment as ‘the village idiot’ after his shooting in June 1974. Is this why his family was offered the rate normally reserved for "minors"?

"The MoD stands guilty of decades of racist and often illegal behaviour in response to wrong-doing by British soldiers. A culture of impunity still exists in respect of the actions of the British military in Iraq and Afghanistan."

NOTE FOR EDITORS

Launch and photo op near Parliament Sq, 12 noon, Tuesday 15 November. 
Members of the Quinn family will be present.
A briefing for MPS and the public will take place in Room U Portcullis House 3.00-5.00pm on Tuesday Nov 15. 
We urge supporters to take a photo if they see the van and tweet it with the hashtag #whatpricealife

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