15/11/2010
Shock As RIR Soldier Dies In Afghan Blast
Remembrance Sunday was marked across the UK yesterday, while in NI, it was particularly poignant following news that a soldier from 1st Battalion The Royal Irish Regiment (RIR) had died in an explosion in Afghanistan.
The Ministry of Defence said the as yet unnamed soldier - who was from County Londonderry - died when an improvised explosive device detonated while he was on patrol in Nad-e Ali, Helmand province.
The death of the 20-year-old soldier, whose name has not been released but is thought to come from Macosquin, a village near Coleraine - raises the toll in Afghanistan since 2001 to 344.
NI Secretary of State Owen Paterson has said that the death of a soldier from the 1st Battalion the Royal Irish Regiment in Afghanistan on Remembrance Sunday was a 'tragedy beyond words' for his family and comrades.
The Regiment is based in Tern Hill near Market Drayton in the Secretary of State's own Shropshire constituency. Mr Paterson said: "On the day that we remembered all those who died defending freedom and democracy, another brave young man gave his life in that cause.
"This conflict is global but the grief and pain of loss is intensely personal.
"My thoughts are with the family and friends of this courageous soldier," he said, this morning.
Stormont First Minister Peter Robinson also said he was deeply moved and saddened: "This death brings home the reality of war. Remembrance Sunday is not about the past, it's about the present.
"It's about the family in Northern Ireland who are now grieving the loss of their boy. I extend my deepest sympathies to them."
As the news came in, services were being held across NI, with even a senior civic representative from the Irish Republic attending one of Sunday's Poppy Day commemorations.
The Mayor of Drogheda, Paul Bell - whose own great grandfather was killed fighting with the British Army in World War I - donned his official robes to stand side-by-side with the DUP Mayor of Newtownabbey, Paula Bradley.
They jointly took the salute as veterans and serving soldiers, sailors and airmen and cadets paraded past after their traditional church service.
The Labour party politician also attended the church service too, held as always in Whiteabbey Presbyterian Church, and laid a wreath during the solemn remembrance service.
This was a return trip, as just last weekend the Irish Tricolour flew as the Newtownabbey Mayor watched as Whiteabbey Royal British Legion Standards were unfurled in Co Louth to remember British Army war dead from across Ireland.
At that service, ex-British regular army and part-time UDR and RIR soldiers mingled with former troops from the Irish Republic at the war memorial in Drogheda's Mary Street which is the venue for the now annual event to honour the World War fallen.
They stood side-by-side as Royal British Legion Poppy wreaths were laid along with the tricolour wreaths of the Organisation of National Ex-servicemen, (ONE) as the traditional two-minute silence was observed. The symbolism was completed with the Union Flag - incorporated in the Legion's Royal Standard - dipped in tribute as the Irish Tricolour also paid tribute to a fallen generation.
(BMcC/KMcA)
The Ministry of Defence said the as yet unnamed soldier - who was from County Londonderry - died when an improvised explosive device detonated while he was on patrol in Nad-e Ali, Helmand province.
The death of the 20-year-old soldier, whose name has not been released but is thought to come from Macosquin, a village near Coleraine - raises the toll in Afghanistan since 2001 to 344.
NI Secretary of State Owen Paterson has said that the death of a soldier from the 1st Battalion the Royal Irish Regiment in Afghanistan on Remembrance Sunday was a 'tragedy beyond words' for his family and comrades.
The Regiment is based in Tern Hill near Market Drayton in the Secretary of State's own Shropshire constituency. Mr Paterson said: "On the day that we remembered all those who died defending freedom and democracy, another brave young man gave his life in that cause.
"This conflict is global but the grief and pain of loss is intensely personal.
"My thoughts are with the family and friends of this courageous soldier," he said, this morning.
Stormont First Minister Peter Robinson also said he was deeply moved and saddened: "This death brings home the reality of war. Remembrance Sunday is not about the past, it's about the present.
"It's about the family in Northern Ireland who are now grieving the loss of their boy. I extend my deepest sympathies to them."
As the news came in, services were being held across NI, with even a senior civic representative from the Irish Republic attending one of Sunday's Poppy Day commemorations.
The Mayor of Drogheda, Paul Bell - whose own great grandfather was killed fighting with the British Army in World War I - donned his official robes to stand side-by-side with the DUP Mayor of Newtownabbey, Paula Bradley.
They jointly took the salute as veterans and serving soldiers, sailors and airmen and cadets paraded past after their traditional church service.
The Labour party politician also attended the church service too, held as always in Whiteabbey Presbyterian Church, and laid a wreath during the solemn remembrance service.
This was a return trip, as just last weekend the Irish Tricolour flew as the Newtownabbey Mayor watched as Whiteabbey Royal British Legion Standards were unfurled in Co Louth to remember British Army war dead from across Ireland.
At that service, ex-British regular army and part-time UDR and RIR soldiers mingled with former troops from the Irish Republic at the war memorial in Drogheda's Mary Street which is the venue for the now annual event to honour the World War fallen.
They stood side-by-side as Royal British Legion Poppy wreaths were laid along with the tricolour wreaths of the Organisation of National Ex-servicemen, (ONE) as the traditional two-minute silence was observed. The symbolism was completed with the Union Flag - incorporated in the Legion's Royal Standard - dipped in tribute as the Irish Tricolour also paid tribute to a fallen generation.
(BMcC/KMcA)
Related UK National News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.
25 July 2008
British Soldier Dies In 'Enemy Fire' In Afghanistan
Another British soldier had been killed in southern Afghanistan, it has been confirmed by the Ministry of Defence. The soldier, from the Royal Army Veterinary Corps, attached to the 2nd Battalion the Parachute Regiment, died on Thursday, after coming under fire while on routine patrol.
British Soldier Dies In 'Enemy Fire' In Afghanistan
Another British soldier had been killed in southern Afghanistan, it has been confirmed by the Ministry of Defence. The soldier, from the Royal Army Veterinary Corps, attached to the 2nd Battalion the Parachute Regiment, died on Thursday, after coming under fire while on routine patrol.
22 November 2005
Tributes paid to soldier killed in Iraq
Tributes have been paid to the British soldier killed in a bomb attack in Iraq at the weekend. Sergeant John ‘Jonah’ Jones, 31, from the 1st Battalion the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, died from injuries sustained in a roadside bomb attack in the southern Iraq city of Basra on Sunday.
Tributes paid to soldier killed in Iraq
Tributes have been paid to the British soldier killed in a bomb attack in Iraq at the weekend. Sergeant John ‘Jonah’ Jones, 31, from the 1st Battalion the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers, died from injuries sustained in a roadside bomb attack in the southern Iraq city of Basra on Sunday.
20 October 2005
MoD names British soldier killed in Iraq
The Ministry of Defence has named the British soldier killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq on Tuesday night. Sergeant Christian Hickey, of the 1st Battalion the Coldstream Guards, died as a result of his injuries, following the explosion, which took place around 11:23 local time in Basra on Tuesday night.
MoD names British soldier killed in Iraq
The Ministry of Defence has named the British soldier killed by a roadside bomb in Iraq on Tuesday night. Sergeant Christian Hickey, of the 1st Battalion the Coldstream Guards, died as a result of his injuries, following the explosion, which took place around 11:23 local time in Basra on Tuesday night.
13 September 2005
MoD names soldier killed in Iraq
The Ministry of Defence has confirmed the name of a British soldier killed in a bomb explosion in Iraq on Sunday. Major Matthew Bacon, 34, from the London area, was travelling in an armoured landrover in Basra, southern Iraq, when a roadside bomb exploded, hitting the vehicle.
MoD names soldier killed in Iraq
The Ministry of Defence has confirmed the name of a British soldier killed in a bomb explosion in Iraq on Sunday. Major Matthew Bacon, 34, from the London area, was travelling in an armoured landrover in Basra, southern Iraq, when a roadside bomb exploded, hitting the vehicle.
18 August 2008
Military Death Toll Mounts In Afghanistan
Another British soldier has been killed in southern Afghanistan. The Ministry of Defence said the soldier - the 30th to die in the country this year - and the 116th since the operation began in October 2001 was part of a joint British-Afghan patrol which was hit by an explosion at 8.25am local time.
Military Death Toll Mounts In Afghanistan
Another British soldier has been killed in southern Afghanistan. The Ministry of Defence said the soldier - the 30th to die in the country this year - and the 116th since the operation began in October 2001 was part of a joint British-Afghan patrol which was hit by an explosion at 8.25am local time.