Pardon For Executed Soldiers
EDM number 258 in 1992-93, proposed by Andrew Mackinlay on 15/06/1992.
That this House believes it is not too late to restore the names and reputation of the 307 soldiers of the British Empire Forces court martialled and executed, mostly on the Western Front in the four years 1914-1918, following charges ranging from desertion, cowardice, quitting posts, sleeping at posts, disobedience, striking a superior officer and casting away arms; regrets deficiencies in their opportunity to prepare adequate defence and appeals; notes the marked and enlightened change in the Army's attitude just over a score of years later to the consequences of soldiers enduring long periods of severe cold and damp, lack of food and sleep coupled with the stress and shock of constant shellfire with the result that not a single soldier was executed on these charges throughout the six years from 1939-1945; considers that the vast majority of the 307 executed were as patriotic and brave as their million other compatriots who perished in the conflict and that their misfortune was brought about due to stress, or the stress of their accusers, during battle and even if the behaviour of a small minority may have fallen below that of the highest standards then time, compassion, and justice dictates that all of these soldiers should now be treated as victims of the conflict; and urges the Prime Minister to recommend a posthumous pardon for all 307, thus bringing to a close a deeply unhappy and controversial chapter in the history of the Great War.
This motion has been signed by a total of 87 MPs, 1 of these signatures have been withdrawn.
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