Inquiry is being held at the Methodist Central Hall in London
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Up to 50 rifles were gathered from soldiers in a hand cart after the Bloody
Sunday shootings, the Saville Inquiry has heard.
Soldier INQ 1094, a former corporal in the Parachute Regiment, said he was
certain this memory was of Londonderry on 30 January, 1972.
The Saville Inquiry is examining the events of 30 January 1972 when 13 civilians were shot dead by British army soldiers during a civil rights march in Derry. A 14th person died later.
The soldier told the Saville Inquiry in London on Monday, he had never seen anything like
this before, which is why it stuck in his mind.
"I saw two soldiers wheeling or pulling a wheelbarrow or hand cart which had
on it between 40 and 50 SLRs," he said.
"The magazines had been taken off the rifles. I did not have any conversation
with these soldiers and assumed they had collected the rifles from other
soldiers and had, perhaps, distributed baton guns to the soldiers instead.
"I have, however, never seen weapons collected in such a way before and this
stuck in my mind because it was so unusual."
I saw two soldiers wheeling or pulling a wheelbarrow or hand cart which had
on it between 40 and 50 SLRs
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Soldier INQ 1094 also said he recalled an army operation in Londonderry in the
weeks prior to Bloody Sunday which was intended to get people who may cause
trouble at the civil rights march, off the streets.
"Some of the men in the battalion were dressed in plain clothes and were sent
down into one of the Londonderry housing estates," he said.
"The idea was to try to tempt out the troublemakers from the estate, but
no-one took the bait.
"I remember being up on a hill overlooking the estate when the regimental
chaplain spoke. He said some of us may not return that day and we all knelt down
and prayed together. This obviously worried me and stuck in my mind."
Meanwhile, Soldier 164, a warrant officer in the Coldstream Guards, told the
inquiry soldiers came under fire on Bloody Sunday.
He said he recalled a shot hitting a wall directly behind him as he was
stationed in an observation post overlooking the nationalist Bogside area.
"The shot seemed to have come from the general area of the Rossville Flats
but I did not form an impression as to precisely where it came from," he said.
"As we didn't see a target we didn't return fire. However, I assumed at the
time that the shot was fired by an IRA gunman."
The soldier also said he later recalled two shots being fired at soldiers from
the Royal Anglian Regiment, who were stationed nearby, but he was not sure where
these shots came from.
The testimony of Soldiers INQ 1094 and 164 brought the number of witnesses to
appear before the Saville Inquiry to 760.
The inquiry, which is based at the Guildhall in Derry, is currently hearing the evidence from military witnesses and others in London because of concerns for their safety.