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British Military member dies in Iraq coaching accident

The Ministry of Defence issued the assertion on Monday.

A member of the British Military died in a coaching accident in Iraq on Sunday (file pic) (Picture: Getty)

A member of the British Military died in a coaching accident in Iraq on Sunday, the Ministry of Defence mentioned. UK Defence Secretary, John Healey, confirmed the incident occurred within the north of the nation on Sunday.

The soldier’s id has not been launched and it has not but identified how the incident occurred. Talking within the Home of Commons, Mr Healey mentioned: “A coaching accident occurred in Northern Iraq yesterday for which a service personnel from the British Military has died. The household has been knowledgeable and requested for a interval of grace earlier than additional particulars are launched. I do know the ideas of the Home are with the household.”

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A spokesperson for the Ministry of Defence added: “It’s with deep remorse that we will verify {that a} coaching accident occurred in northern Iraq on Sunday 31 Might 2026 during which a service particular person from the British Military died. The service particular person’s household have been knowledgeable and have requested a interval of grace earlier than additional particulars are launched. Our ideas and sympathies are with the household and associates at this unhappy time.”

Theincident comes after Captain Philip Gilbert Muldowney, 25, misplaced his life throughout a coaching train at Northumberland’s Otterburn Coaching Space on January 25 – one of many UK’s largest military coaching ranges – prompting an ongoing investigation into the circumstances surrounding his dying.

Captain Muldowney, who grew up in County Roscommon, served as a hearth assist commander with 129 (Dragon) Battery, 4th Regiment Royal Artillery.

The promising younger officer joined the Military in January 2020 and was commissioned into the Royal Artillery later that yr after finishing his coaching on the prestigious Royal Army Academy Sandhurst.

An inquest held in March was instructed that “an incident occurred which resulted in Gilbert struggling a gunshot wound, which is believed to have entered by his again and exited by his left shoulder”.

Following the tragedy, the Ministry of Defence paid tribute to Capt Muldowney, describing him as an “immensely enthusiastic officer who embraced life with a vigour that impressed these round him”.

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