Colonel Derek Wilford (16 February 1933 – 24 November 2023) was a British Army officer who commanded the 1st Battalion, Parachute Regiment in Derry, Northern Ireland, on Bloody Sunday. At the time a lieutenant colonel, he was in command when soldiers within his battalion shot 26 unarmed civilian protesters, killing 13 of them.Simon Winchester, "Amid the tears and cheers, a full stop to Britain's colonial experience in Northern Ireland", The Guardian, 15 June 2010David McKittrick, "Saville pins the blame for Bloody Sunday on British soldiers", The Independent, 16 June 2010 The following year he was awarded the OBE by Queen Elizabeth II, seen as a reward for his part in Bloody Sunday. The Saville Inquiry into the incident found that he had ignored orders, without justification, and in doing so had "set in train" the shootings.
Saville suggested Wilford "wanted to demonstrate the way to deal with rioters in Derry was not for soldiers to shelter behind barricades like (as he put it) Aunt Sally while being stoned, as he perceived the local troops had been doing, but instead to go aggressively after rioters, as he and his soldiers had been doing in Belfast". He added: "His failure to comply with his orders, instead setting in train the very thing his brigadier has prohibited him from doing, cannot be justified...Colonel Wilford should not have launched an incursion into the Bogside."
Wilford had been outspoken against the criticism of his leadership and always defended the actions of his soldiers since the incident. He always maintained his soldiers were fired upon first and in 1992 in a BBC documentary he stated "I don't believe my soldiers were wrong", reasoning "If you get into an enormous crowd which is out to make mischief you are in the first instance a party to it." In 1998 he stated he was angry at Tony Blair's intention of setting up the Saville Inquiry and that he should not apologise for it. In 1999, speaking on BBC radio he "suggested that almost all Northern Ireland Catholics were closet republicans". This reportedly angered the family members of some victims. He later apologised for his comments, yet "the army distanced itself from him".
Wilford had claimed he had been made a scapegoat since that day and had been abandoned by the military hierarchy and British Government. Despite this he did not retire from the army until 1983, although he stated he felt constantly passed over for promotion, ending his career only one rank higher than his 1972 rank.
In 2010, he was incorrectly reported by RTÉ and the BBC to have died.
Wilford died following Parkinson's disease on 24 November 2023, at the age of 90.
|
|