British soldier who blinded Derry boy says ‘sorry’

A Derry man blinded by a rubber bullet as a child says the British soldier who shot him has apologised.
Richard Moore and Charles Inness.Richard Moore and Charles Inness.
Richard Moore and Charles Inness.

Richard Moore lost his sight at the age of 10 when he was hit by a rubber bullet in Derry in 1972.

In 2007, he met the soldier who shot him. He has since maintained a friendship with Charles Inness whom he has come to forgive.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

But, until recently, Mr Moore said Mr Inness had been unable to tell him he was sorry.

“When it came, it was really moving. I didn’t need it, I didn’t ask for it, but when it came it was really, really nice. It really was,” Mr Moore said.

He said Mr Inness, now aged 78, had been of the opinion “that when you say ‘sorry’, it means that you didn’t mean to fire the bullet”.

“He’d say: ‘I meant to fire the bullet, but I never meant to cause the damage.’ He always said if he’d known what was going to happen to me, he wouldn’t have fired it.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Mr Moore said that, while to him that seemed like “semantics”, the more the two men got to know each other “the more he felt the former soldier was sorry”.

“And, then, eventually many years after we first met, we were talking about the ‘sorry’ word one night and he said to me, ‘Richard, I am sorry’,” Mr Moore added.

Now the director of the Derry-based charity Children in Crossfire, Mr Moore lost one eye and the sight in the other when he was struck in the face with the rubber bullet.

His charity was recently awarded a £250,000 UK government grant through the Department For International Development’s UK Aid Direct scheme to help provide 100,000 children in the Dodoma region of Tanzania with an education.

See Friday’s Derry Journal for full story.

Related topics: