Ballymurphy inquest: Families of dead just want money, says former Army medic
The civilians were shot dead over the course of three days in the Ballymurphy area of west Belfast in 1971.
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Hide AdThe sequence of events started on August 9 as the Army moved into republican strongholds to arrest IRA suspects after the introduction by the Stormont administration of the controversial policy of internment without trial.
A new inquest at Belfast Coroner’s Court is examining the deaths of the 10 civilians.
Six were killed on August 9 including a Catholic priest and a mother of eight.
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Hide AdNigel Mumford, who was attached to the Second Battalion of the Parachute Regiment in Ballymurphy on August 9, disputed a witness statement given to the inquest by David Callaghan saying that he had been badly beaten by soldiers at a temporary Army base at Henry Taggart Hall.
Mr Mumford told the inquest he recalled treating Mr Callaghan for a bullet wound on his arm, and insisted nobody attacked him in the hall.
“What you have heard is perjury from families that want money, no soldier touched that man,” Mr Mumford said, giving evidence from an undisclosed location by video-link, to audible shock in the Belfast courtroom.
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Hide AdClaims that IRA gunmen were in the Ballymurphy area at the time have been disputed during the inquest hearings.
Mr Mumford said he heard an officer suggest planting ammunition in the clothing of the wounded.
“I would not allow it,” he said, but when asked whether he had reported what happened, said he did not want to negatively impact his career.
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Hide Ad“It takes a brave man to go up against an officer in the British Army.”
Mr Mumford told the inquest he saw IRA gunmen armed with Thompson submachine guns, Armalite rifles and pistols outside Henry Taggart Hall.
He said he was shot at as he cleared stones thrown at the front of the hall. That task had been allocated to him as a punishment after he shouted “Up the IRA, by the f***ing neck” at a crowd.
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Hide Ad“The first gunfire started on me outside the Henry Taggart Hall. I could hear explosions and bullets going off everywhere, it was like Guy Fawkes Night,” he said.
He also told the inquest he heard an officer give the order to soldiers to shoot to kill.
Earlier yesterday Mr Mumford described seeing soldiers mete out psychological torture on people they interned.
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Hide AdHe said he saw internees with bags placed over their heads and their hands tied behind their back, and said they were made to believe they were going to be pushed off a table and hung.
“It was to put the fear of God into them,” he said.
“No one was pulling their fingernails off, no one was cutting them, no one was putting bruises on them.
“No one was taking teeth out with pliers, it was slight physical but nothing ‘torture, torture’.”
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Hide AdQuestioned by counsel for Coroner Siobhan Keegan about inconsistencies between accounts he gave in a book he wrote about his Army service and videos he posted on You Tube, Mr Mumford told the inquest that after he wrote his book one of his notepads was “stolen by a frog” in Tahiti.
The inquest continues.