THE RICHARD HUNT FOUNDATION Welsh Warrior

31Oct/090

Injured toll doubles in a year

Nearly 1,000 Service personnel have been wounded in action in Afghanistan, the latest casualty figures have disclosed. The latest figures that cover upto the 15th October. The figures show that up to October 15, 386 Service personnel had been wounded in action, taking the toll of injured since 2001 to 940. All but ten have occurred since 2006.
According to the Ministry of Defence figures, more than four members of the Armed Forces are being wounded for every death. In 2006, 85 were wounded and 234 the following year. In 2008, 235 were injured. The numbers who have been “very seriously” or “seriously” wounded have also increased sharply.
In 2006, the first year of combat with the Taleban in Helmand, 31 Service personnel received injuries in these two categories. In 2007 the total rose to 63 and in 2008 it was 65. This year the number has doubled to 121.
The MoD said that the figures reflected the “torrid summer” faced by troops in Helmand, with the Taleban laying improvised explosive devices.

All the seriously wounded are flown to the Royal Centre for Defence Medicine at Selly Oak in Birmingham. Defence sources said that there were contingency plans for taking seriously wounded servicemen to other hospitals in the area, but at present the Selly Oak hospital could cope with the influx of injured.

Those who have lost limbs or suffered permanent brain damage are cared for at the MoD’s rehabilitation centre at Headley Court, near Dorking, Surrey.

We shall continue to raise public awareness on these often hiden figures.

24Oct/090

The Abandonded Soldier

 

 

 

 

The Abandoned Soldier

 

 

 


A youthful face
With innocent cares,
Wide eyed child
With infant stares.

 

 


The child grew up
Played soldier games,
With sticks for guns
Pretending to maim.

 


Young boy left school
Sought to be a man,
To render peace
In Afghanistan.


But all too soon
The decision made,
Some years of his life
With the Army he’d trade.


Once training done
And off he flew,
To fight a war
In pastures new.


Soon a mortar attack,
Killed, outright four,
But ‘lucky’ for him
He was blown to the floor.


Though injuries sustained
Were incidental,
Not so physical
More like mental.


The cuts and bruises
Would heal away,
But the mental scars
With him they’d stay.


The career he’d wanted
As a child,
Became a curse
It drove him wild.


With visions of battle
That never would end,
He’d witnessed the death
Of his closest friend.


So he had to leave
The new family he trusted
With a broken head,
Psychologically busted.


He hoped they’d help
To resettle him.
Instead discarded,
Thrown in a bin.


Abandoned and left
To his own devices,
Thoughts of suicide
And similar vices.


So look what has happened
There is no one bolder
Than the man we call,
‘The Abandoned Soldier’.


Who fought for his Country
Over hundreds of years,
Did not die,
but is left,
With a wounded man’s tears.

© Mark Christmas

 

 

Poem above sent to us by Mark Christmas.

23Sep/090

Following The Injured

Documentary on BBC One.

Documentary following the journey of two injured soldiers: 19-year-old Ranger Andy Allen who, in July 2008, had his right leg blown off and his eyes badly burnt by an improvised explosive device; and 24-year-old Lance Corporal Tom Neathway, who lost three limbs after moving a booby-trapped sandbag.

Hopefully this documentary will raise the public awareness of the injured and often forgotten service men and women returning from active service.

   
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