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Slain Irish soldiers mother condemns Iraq war
By Julie Hyland
23 March 2004
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The mother of the only Irish soldier to be killed during the
occupation of Iraq has attacked the US-led war.
Mary Malones 28-year-old son, Lance Corporal Ian Malone,
was shot dead by a sniper near the southern Iraqi town of Basra
on April 6, 2003. A 20-year-old British soldier also died in the
attack.
Mrs. Malone was making a St. Patricks Day visit to the
Irish Guards barracks in Bessbrook, South Armagh, for a
presentation being made by Princess Anne. During the ceremony
on March 18, Mrs. Malone had presented a cap badge to the Guards
regiment in honour of her son and others who had died in the war.
But afterwards, she said that she felt the attack on Iraq was
wrong, and should never have taken place.
Ian Malone had served in the Irish Guards for six years and
had been stationed in the UK, Poland, Oman, Canada, Kosovo and
Germany. She had been bitter following his death, but you
cannot go through life being bitter because Ian wouldnt
have wanted that.
Nevertheless, she thought the war was totally unnecessary:
I dont think the war should ever have happened.
It was not necessary. There was no need for the war at all. Since
the war has ended, so many have died, I think it was totally unnecessary.
Mrs. Malones comments caused severe embarrassment to
the Irish governments, north and south of the border. The Iraq
war sparked mass protests in Ireland. During the wave of international
demonstrations last February, some 20,000 protested in Belfast,
Northern Ireland, and quarter of a million in Dublin. The protesters
were particularly outraged by the decision of Irish Prime Minister
Bertie Ahern to defy popular opposition to the war, and grant
overflying and landing rights at Shannon airport, near Limerick,
to US military transport planes en route to the Middle East.
The Dublin mother joins a growing number of relatives with
loved ones killed in Iraq who have spoken out against the war.
In January, the British government was condemned by the widow
of one soldier killed in Iraq, after it was revealed that his
death was the result of equipment shortages. Sergeant Steven Roberts,
33, was serving with the 2nd Royal Tank Regiment when he was shot
dead at Zubayr, near Basra, on March 24. His wife revealed that
her husband had informed her in a cassette tape letter before
his death that he had been made to hand over body armour to another
soldier because there was not enough to go around. The pathologists
report showed that an armoured vest would have saved Robertss
life.
In the US, as the death toll of US steadily mounts, more military
family members are denouncing the governments Iraq policy.
In November, the relatives of 16 soldiers killed when their
Chinook helicopter was shot down over Iraq condemned the Bush
administration for the deaths. Rosemarie Dietz Slavenas, mother
of a 30-year-old Illinois National Guardsman Brian, refused to
allow a military funeral for her son and rejected the stars and
stripes being draped over his coffin.
In an outspoken attack on the government, she said, I
believe my son Brian died not for his country but because of our
countrys lack of a coherent and civilised foreign policy.
My son was not a soldier, he was my son. George [W.]
Bush killed my son. I request in Brians name a stop to the
killing. No more preemptive wars.
See Also:
One year since the US invasion of Iraq
[19 March 2004]
Families of soldiers
condemn Bushs war
[27 October 2003]
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