Special Forces heads suppressed SAS war crime evidence, inquiry hears

Bruce Houlder KC, who as a former director of service prosecutions was responsible for bringing charges and prosecuting those serving in the armed forces, told the BBC that the law “imposed a very clear duty” on commanding officers to report suspected crimes, “including murder, which we are talking about here”.
“If this came to my knowledge I would have asked the service police to investigate the DSF for that failure to report in 2011,” he said.
N1466 eventually reported the evidence directly to the Royal Military Police in January 2015, nearly four years after he had first raised his concerns and only after the RMP had begun Operation Northmoor, an investigation into the SAS.
He told the inquiry it was “a matter of great regret” that he had not gone sooner to the RMP, nor urged the director to refer the evidence to the RMP – a move which he said he viewed at the time as stepping out of line.
“When you look back on it, on those people who died unnecessarily from that point onwards – there were two toddlers shot in their bed next to their parents, you know – all that would not… necessarily have come to pass,” he said.
He was referring to an SAS raid in Nimruz province in August 2012 which was first uncovered by the BBC, on which two young parents were fatally shot while in bed with their infant sons, who were also shot and gravely wounded.
The raid, which occurred after the new director special forces had taken over, was never reported to the military police.
The director who took over in 2012 told the BBC that the allegations made by N1466 were refuted and that he would provide a comprehensive response to each of these matters in his evidence to the inquiry in due course.
He said that none of his senior commanders expressed any concerns or produced any evidence of unlawful killings at any stage of his three years in charge and that there was no allegation or evidence he was aware of to refer to the RMP.
The former officer who was director special forces in 2011 did not respond to a request for comment.




