EOD Johnson, Barry

John Robertson

Administrator
Staff member
  • SURNAME
Johnson
  • FORENAME
Barry
  • UNIT
321 EOD Company, Royal Army Ordnance Corps
  • RANK
Warrant Officer First Class
  • NUMBER
24092380
  • AWARD
George Cross
  • PLACE
Northern Ireland 1989
  • ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
born 25.1.1952 London
wife Maria (2 children)
seriously injured 7.10.1989 Londonderry, Northern Ireland
London Gazette 52324, 5th November 1990, Page 17199
 

CITATION:

George Cross : WO1 B. Johnson, R.A.O.C. serving as an E.O.D. operator in N.Ireland completed 25 E.O.D. tasks, including the safe neutralization of 9 live devices. The most significant incident occurred when W.0.1 Johnson was tasked to a vehicle which, it was suspected, contained mortars designed to be fired at a nearby Security Forces base. The vehicle had been abandoned in the middle of a housing estate and beside a hospital.

WO1 Johnson immediately realized that civilian lives would be put at risk if any of the mortar bombs were inadvertently launched during his disposal action. The normal procedure would have been to deal with the mortars by using a remotely controlled vehicle to disrupt the device. He decided that this posed too great a risk to civilian lives and that he would have to remove the bombs from their firing tubes and dismantle them by hand.

With the help of his assistant, the firing tubes were carefully moved from the back of the vehicle and placed on the ground. As the next stage was extremely hazardous, due to the delicate nature of thebombs, WO1 Johnson sent his assistant back behind cover and continued the render-safe procedure alone. He placed the firing tubes so that if they fired or exploded, the patients in the hospital would not have been in danger. In the dark, and in a bitterly cold drizzle, which made the handling of metal objects more hazardous, he proceeded to remove the bombs, dismantling each in turn. While he was dismantling the last bomb, there was an explosion, causing him very serious injury to his face, eyes and legs. Completely blinded by high velocity fragments, he was thrown across the road by the force of the blast, suffering multiple injuries to his legs.

Such was his courage and determination to ensure that the task was completed safely that, although in great pain, he refused to be evacuated until he had carefully briefed his assistant on the precise details of the device so that the operation could be safely completed by a replacement operator.

Source : LG52324

WEB LINKS:

https://www.thegazette.co.uk/London/issue/52324/supplement/17199
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