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Public Interest Lawyers defend £22m inquiry into Iraq deaths

City-based Public Interest Lawyers were behind the huge legal challenge which was based around witness claims the men were taken prisoner by British soldiers, and later mistreated and murdered.

British soldiers in Iraq

A Birmingham lawyer behind a collapsed £22 million investigation over claims British troops shot 20 Iraqi men in cold blood has claimed there are still important questions to answer.

City-based Public Interest Lawyers were behind the huge legal challenge which was based around witness claims the men were taken prisoner by British soldiers, and later mistreated and murdered.

But the Al-Sweady Public Inquiry eventually admitted there was no concrete evidence the insurgents had been unlawfully killed while prisoners of the British Army.

Despite the latest development John Dickinson from Public Interest Lawyers (PIL) said the inquiry would still have to consider allegations º£½ÇÊÓÆµ troops mistreated Iraqi civilians.

The development in the Al-Sweady Public Inquiry saw PIL announce that, following the conclusion of the military’s case, there was “insufficient evidence” the Iraqi men were unlawfully killed whilst in the custody of British troops in May 2004.

The inquiry, which has run for 167 days, was set up to look into alleged abuses of nine detainees by º£½ÇÊÓÆµ soldiers and the claims around 20 were unlawfully killed. It was claimed the Iraqis were unlawfully killed at Camp Abu Naji (CAN) near Majar-al-Kabir on May 14 and 15, 2004, and detainees were ill-treated there and later at Shaibah Logistics Base.

The Ministry of Defence denied the allegations, saying the Iraqi men had died on the battlefield at a battle referred to as “Danny Boy” and been taken back to CAN.

The inquiry, announced in 2009 and named after Hameed Al Sweady, one of those who died, is set to conclude in April, with a report later this year. The total bill had topped £22 million by the end of February.