Soldierâs sister says Army ânot safeâ for women
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The sister of a 19-year-old soldier who took her own life after being sexually assaulted has said the Army is not a âsafe space for womenâ.
Royal Artillery Gunner Jaysley Beck was found dead in her barracks at Larkhill Camp in Wiltshire on 15 December 2021, after a Christmas party.
On Thursday, a coroner ruled the Army had contributed to Gunner Beckâs death by failing to take action after she was harassed by her line manager and sexually assaulted by another colleague.
The Army has apologised and said âsignificant changesâ had been made, but Gunner Beckâs sister, Emilli Beck, said she wanted an independent body to âhandle the most serious casesâ in the future.
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Ms Beck told BBC Radio 4âs Today programme she would not recommend that women join the Army.
âI just donât think itâs a safe space for women at this time. I think itâs scary and I certainly wouldnât advise it,â she said.
She said her sister ânever got believedâ after she made a complaint against Battery Sgt Maj Michael Webber following an incident at a work social.
âIt took her a lot of courage to speak up,â she said. âShe trusted that the Army would have dealt with this appropriately and they just never did.â
An inquest into the death of Gunner Beck, originally from Oxen Park in Cumbria, found she was also subject to relentless harassment by her line manager, Bombadier Ryan Mason.
Ms Beck said her sister did not want to report the harassment after âshe wasnât believed the first time.â
âItâs sort of as the saying goes â once bitten, twice shy,â she said.
âShe didnât want to be seen as that girl who sort of made these accusations and nothing got done of it.â
Coroner Nicholas Rheinberg ruled the Armyâs failure to take appropriate action over the âfrighteningâ incidents âmore than minimallyâ contributed to Gunner Beckâs death.
âI find there was a failure on behalf of the Army to take action over the harassment she was suffering from her line manager,â he concluded.
âAnd there was a failure on behalf of the Army to take action against the senior officer at whose hands sheâd suffered a sexual assault.â
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Brig Melissa Emmett, head of the Army personnel services group, has apologised to Gunner Beckâs family.
She said âsignificant changesâ had been made within the Army, including the âintroduction of clear and unequivocal policies to state that there will be zero tolerance to unacceptable sexual behavioursâ.
âThere is more work to do,â she said.
âIt is my hope that such change will give service personnel the confidence they need to report sexual offences and inappropriate behaviours, knowing that they will be listened to.â
But Ms Beck said more needed to be done, to prevent similar things happening in the future.
âI can appreciate them talking about measures that are going to be put in place, but these measures were always there, they were just never followed,â she said.
Ms Beck believes the âculture of the Army needs to changeâ in order for cases of sexual assault or harassment to be investigated thoroughly in the future.
âThe pain that we felt in the last three-and-a-half years is something that I would never want another family to go through,â she said.
âFemale soldiers have completely lost faith in the Army.â
âJaysley lived as her true authentic self, she was just an incredible person,â Ms Beck added.
âShe brought life to everybodyâs life, she was just so happy, she always stayed the same.â
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