BSS
  23 Oct 2025, 10:30

Verdict due in Bloody Sunday trial of British ex-soldier

BELFAST, Oct 23, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - A judge in Belfast will deliver a verdict Thursday in the first-ever trial of a former British soldier accused of killing unarmed civilians during the 1972 Bloody Sunday massacre.

The ex-paratrooper, identified only as Soldier F, has denied two charges of murder and five of attempted murder during one of the most difficult events of the three-decade "Troubles" that plagued Northern Ireland.

Soldier F was charged with murdering civilians, James Wray and William McKinney, and attempting to murder five others during the crackdown on a civil rights protest in the town of Londonderry -- also known as Derry.

British troops opened fire on protesters in the majority-Catholic Bogside area of the city on January 30, 1972, killing 13 people.

A 14th victim later died of his wounds.

The case is deeply divisive in Northern Ireland, where the decades of sectarian violence that began in the 1960s still cast a long shadow.

- 'Shooting unjustified' -

During the month-long trial that ended last week Soldier F, whose request to remain anonymous throughout the proceedings had been granted, remained hidden from view behind a thick blue curtain.

In previous interviews he told police he no longer had a reliable recollection of the events, and was not called to give evidence in his own defence during the trial.

"The prosecution case is that that shooting was unjustified," barrister Louis Mably told Belfast Crown Court at the opening of the trial last month.

"The civilians ... did not pose a threat to the soldiers and nor could the soldiers have believed that they did," he said.

Last week judge Patrick Lynch refused an application by defence barrister Mark Mulholland to dismiss the case because the evidence could not be relied on.

Mulholland argued that statements made by two key witnesses, Soldiers G and H, who were present in Londonderry that day along with Soldier F, were unreliable and inconsistent.

The trial heard medical and forensic evidence that the two victims were killed by shots fired most likely from the same gun.

Mably said it was "implausible" that Soldier F could not recall whether or not he opened fire during the incident, and insisted that the witness statements were consistent.

- Apology -

Bloody Sunday helped galvanise support for the Provisional IRA, the main paramilitary organisation fighting for a united Ireland.

It was one of the bloodiest incidents in the conflict known as the Troubles, during which around 3,500 people were killed.

It largely ended with the 1998 peace accords.

Northern Irish prosecutors first recommended Soldier F stand trial in 2019.

A 1972 inquiry into the killings cleared the soldiers of culpability, but was widely seen by Catholics as a whitewash.

That probe, the Widgery Tribunal, closed off prosecutions, and only after the 1998 peace accords was a new investigation, known as the Saville Inquiry, opened.

That 12-year public inquiry, the largest investigation in UK legal history, concluded in 2010 that British paratroopers had lost control and that none of the victims had posed a threat.

The probe prompted then prime minister David Cameron to issue a formal apology for the killings, calling them "unjustified and unjustifiable".

Northern Irish police then began a murder investigation and submitted their files to prosecutors in 2016.

The case against Soldier F faced multiple delays, and bringing other ex-soldiers to trial is widely seen as unlikely.

Relatives of the victims gathered outside the court on the first day, many bearing posters of those killed.

John McKinney, brother of William McKinney, said it was "a momentous day in our battle to secure justice for our loved ones".

The families were placing their "trust in the hands of the public prosecution service", he added.

UK legislation passed under the Conservatives in 2023, the Legacy Act, effectively ended most Troubles-era prosecutions.

Northern Ireland Secretary Hilary Benn formally started the process to repeal the act in December.