From the BBC:
“Blood Sunday: Peggy Deery's
family awarded £267,000”
The family of the only woman shot
on Bloody Sunday is to receive almost £270,000 in damages. Peggy Deery, who was
38 at the time, was shot in the leg when paratroopers opened fire in
Londonderry in January 1972. Mrs Deery, a widowed mother-of-14, died from a
heart attack in 1988. The High Court judgement includes compensation for her
injuries and for the subsequent years of mental distress. Thirteen unarmed
people were killed by soldiers during a civil rights demonstration in the city,
which became known as Bloody Sunday.
Mr Justice McAlinden described
the behaviour of the soldiers who wounded and verbally abused Mrs Deery as
"imbued with a degree of malevolence and flagrancy which was truly
exceptional". He said Mrs Deery was a woman of good character who attended
the civil rights march in support of a society based on fairness and equality. Mrs
Deery's family had sued the Ministry of Defence (MoD) for the injuries they
claim contributed to her death. With liability accepted, the case centred on a
dispute over the appropriate level of damages. Counsel for the family argued
that the paratrooper who shot her probably knew she posed no threat. The court
was told after being shot Mrs Deery was carried into a house on Chamberlain
Street to be treated by members of the Knights of Malta. The court heard
soldiers then entered the property and allegedly directed foul language at the
widow. Mrs Deery, who lost her husband to cancer months before Bloody Sunday,
spent four months in hospital, developed a chronic kidney disease and was
effectively housebound for the rest of her life, the court heard. Her daughter
Helen Deery told the court how they carried out cooking and cleaning duties in
a house with no central heating or washing machine. "We had to do
everything," she said.
'Innocent demonstrator' A
barrister representing the MoD argued her heart problems were probably due to a
heavy smoking habit of 40 cigarettes a day. In judgement, Mr Justice
McAlinden said: "Any claim that she was anything other than an innocent
demonstrator was a fabrication constructed and perpetuated by the perpetrator
or perpetrators of a wrong in an attempt to avoid personal or collective
responsibility for any wrongdoing". Awarding £250,000 to Mrs
Deery's estate, the judge added a further £17,028 in special damages for the
cost of care provided to her. "This will take into account the
mental distress which she undoubtedly suffered by reason of the approach
adopted by the defendant to those killed and injured during Bloody Sunday in
the period between the end of January 1972 and the date of the deceased's death
in January 1988", he added. He said because Mrs Deery died before
the Saville Inquiry into the events of Bloody Sunday, the "cloud of
imputed culpability would, at least to some extent, have cast an intermittent
shadow over her". In 2010 the Saville Inquiry into the shootings
established the innocence of all of the victims. Those findings led to
David Cameron, the then British prime minister, issuing a public apology for
the soldiers' actions. He described the killings as "unjustified
and unjustifiable". The Deery family's solicitor Fearghal Shiels
said the judgement was vindication of Mrs Deery's innocence.
^ This justice is long over-due.
^
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-foyle-west-56720960
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