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Tank regiment’s commander failed to spot key safety breach, inquest told

Lt Col Simon Ridgway was giving evidence at inquests into the deaths of Coprorals Matthew Hatfield and Darren Neilson.

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The commanding officer of a British Army tank regiment has told an inquest he “failed” to spot a culture of crews wrongly storing high explosive charges in their turrets.

Asked if it was a failure of his leadership, Lt Col Simon Ridgway, of the Royal Tank Regiment (RTR), said: “I think I failed to identify it was happening.

“I’m not sure it’s a failure of leadership.”

Lt Col Ridgway said he had spent “a significant amount of time” in his command making sure that he knew “what’s happening” in his unit, and prided himself on that fact.

Battle of Cambrai centenary
Lieutenant Colonel Simon Ridgway, Commanding Officer of The Royal Tank Regiment, has been giving evidence at the inquest. (Ben Birchall/PA)

Crews received regular safety briefings on the proper storage of bag charges, but the Lt Col said it was “difficult” to see  “what happens inside that turret”, once tanks went into action.

He was giving evidence into the inquests of Coprorals Matthew Hatfield and Darren Neilson, who died of their injuries after an explosion in their tank at the Castlemartin firing ranges, Pembrokeshire, Wales, on June 14 2017.

Cpl Neilson, 31, of Preston, Lancashire, was the tank commander and was thrown from Challenger 2 during the blast, while Cpl Hatfield, 27, from Amesbury, Wiltshire, was loading ammunition.

Castlemartin inquest
Corporal Darren Neilson was ejected from the tank’s turret in the blast, which also fatally wounded his colleague, Cpl Hatfield. (Jemma Neilson/PA)

Two other soldiers, Warrant Officer Stuart Lawson, and Trooper Michael Warren, were also injured but survived.

WO Lawson, who was based at the range, had successfully requested to be on board the tank and was allowed to fire it for a “guest shoot”.

But when the tank fired, it was missing a vital piece of equipment which creates an air-tight seal in the gun barrel and preventing 3,000C hot gases escaping into the crew turret.

The part had been removed for routine cleaning by a previous crew, and not yet replaced.

Castlemartin inquest
Corporal Matthew Hatfield, a father-of-one, died of injuries sustained in the blast and subsequent fire. (Abigail Hatfield/PA)

A senior coroner has already heard RTR soldiers giving evidence stating the charge-bags, which propel shells out the barrel, were habitually stored outside special protective containers, called charge bins, in the turret.

Investigations carried out on the damaged tank found bag charges were “unaccounted for”.

Lt Col Ridgway said the practice “had become normalised in a way I had not appreciated”.

He said: “I have to admit I sort of felt physically sick when I heard people were stowing them out of the bins.

“If for one moment I suspected they were storing them incorrectly, I would have been furious.”

Castlemartin inquest
Warrant Officer Stuart Lawson, who survived the explosion along with another soldier. (Joe Giddens/PA)

The senior coroner has also heard the Lt Col was supposed to have obtained written authorisation from a more senior officer for the guest shoot, as was required by Army rules, but “had not appreciated that at the time”.

It also emerged on Friday that Lt Col Lawson did not know Mr Lawson, who was not a qualified tank operator, was carrying out his guest shoot that particular day.

He had also not passed down an order for Mr Lawson to “sit on his hands”, and leave firing to the tank’s commander.

Mr Lawson ended up firing the main gun, but Lt Col Ridgway, accepting “fault” for an oversight, said he only told his second in command – who was then off-site that day – of his order, and not the range control officer.

Castlemartin inquest
Jill McBride, Cpl Hatfield’s fiancee, outside Solihull Civic Suite where the inquest into his death is being held. (Joe Giddens/PA)

He told the coroner: “I acknowledge that what occurred was not what I had intended, and the fault for that is mine.”

Lt Col Ridgway, a veteran of the 2003 invasion of Iraq with many years’ experience of all levels of tank command, had never before run a guest shoot.

He said, as others had testified, that before the incident he had not believed the tank’s main gun could be fired without the air-tight seal – the bolt vent axial (BVA) – being fitted.

The inquest also heard how crews shared tanks, known as “hot-bedding”, and that a whiteboard was used to communicate what crew was assigned to which vehicle.

Mr Lawson’s guest shoot on the tank, call-sign DS-39-AA, had not been marked on the whiteboard, the inquest has previously heard.

Castlemartin inquest
Jemma Neilson, the widow of Cpl Neilson, who has been attending the inquest throughout. (Joe Giddens/PA)

Senior coroner Louise Hunt said to Lt Col Ridgway: “It seems there’s a lack of communication and understanding of what is happening on the range, that’s the impression I’m getting.”

Lt Col Ridgway said: “Up to that point, everything had been running well.”

“But it didn’t work, did it?” asked Ms Hunt.

The Lt Col replied: “At that particular time, it would appear not.”

The inquest continues.

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