Derek Wilford

Colonel Derek Wilford, OBE, was the British Army officer commanding the 1st Battalion of the Parachute Regiment in Derry, Northern Ireland on Bloody Sunday in 1972 in which at the time he was serving as a Lieutenant Colonel.[1][2]

Col Wilford was exonerated by the Widgery tribunal. On 3 October 1972 he was appointed OBE.[3] However, the Saville Inquiry, many years later, determined that Wilford had expressly disobeyed an order from a superior officer, Brigadier Pat MacLellan, who prohibited Wilford from sending troops into the Bogside. The Saville inquiry found that MacLellan was not to blame for the shootings.[4] Lord Saville said Colonel Wilford was wrong to send soldiers into an unfamiliar area where there was risk of attack from republican paramilitaries, in circumstances where the soldiers' response would risk civilians being killed or injured.[5]

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 Sallies 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."[6]

Colonel Wilford was known locally in Derry in the aftermath as the 'Butcher of the Bogside'.[6] On 4 November 1972, Wilford captured the Ulster Volunteer Force leader Gusty Spence, then on the run from prison.[7] He has been outspoken against the criticism at his leadership and has 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."[8] 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.[9] In 1999, speaking on BBC radio "he angered the relatives of those killed and injured during Bloody Sunday by suggesting that almost all Northern Ireland Catholics were closet republicans. Although he later apologised for his comments, the army distanced itself from him"[8]

Wilford has claimed he has been made a scapegoat since that day and has been abandoned by the Military hierarchy and British Government. Despite this he didn't retire from the army until 1983, though he stated he felt constantly picked over for promotion, ending his career only grade higher than in 1972 at Colonel. During this time he stated he became estranged with his wife and divorced her to pursue a relationship with another woman he had met while he was posted in Belgium. He became estranged from ex-wife and son who couldn't forgive him for walking out.[9]

Wilford left the Army a decade later. In 2000, he was living outside the United Kingdom.[8] According to the Derry Journal, as of 2010, Wilford has been living in Belgium for a number of years with his new wife and daughter.[10] In the wake of the release of the Saville report, he has refused to make any further comments stating "I don't want to talk about it. It's all been said."[6][10]

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