Sarkozy blames army shooting accident on negligence

by Rachel Nixon | June 30, 2008 at 11:09 am
282 views | 15 Recommendations | 3 comments

Nicolas Sarkozy has described as "unacceptable negligence" the weekend accident in which a soldier fired live ammunition during an army exercise instead of blanks. Seventeen people were injured in the incident.

An inquiry has been launched into the incident, which occurred during a combat simulation by the Third Marine Parachute regiment, open to the public in the southern French town of Carcassonne. The soldier is being questioned by police.

"I am appalled. It isn't normal," Sarkozy said during a visit to the hospital in Carcassonne where some of the wounded were being treated. He said those responsible for "unacceptable negligence" should be punished.

"My reaction will be rapid and severe ... The whole chain (of command) will have to explain itself, not just one person."

The wounded were mostly members of the public who had been watching the soldiers simulate an attack, including a 3-year-old boy who was hit in the heart and in the arm. Doctors performed an operation overnight and his condition had stabilised.

The chief prosecutor dealing with the case, Brice Robin, told reporters the soldier had said during questioning he made a mistake when he re-loaded his weapon.

"It was not a pre-meditated act, I'm very clear about that. It was a blunder, a human error, a major imprudence, but there was no intention to cause harm," Robin said.

Officials said the soldier had over seven years of experience and had always received good grades for his performance. He had no previous blemish on his record.

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Rob Peters

They hit a 3-year-old in the heart? That's incredible he survived. What a horrific scene that must have been.

politisite
politisite
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 11:33 on June 30th, 2008

Rachel Nixon, I like this story. It's good stuff.  From a former military stand point, In the US Army ammunition is stored carefully and distrubuted the same way.  It would be near impossible to accidently get the wrong ammunition in an exercise.  The soldier usually loads the ammo him/herself and the differance between real ammo and blanks is substancial.  Now if other countries militaries are as careful, I would not know.

Rhonda J Mangus
Rhonda J Mangus
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 14:25 on June 30th, 2008

Rachel Nixon, I like this story. It's good stuff.

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