Ten days until former Royal Marines and Falkland’s veterans tackle historic Falkland’s kayak
Ten days until former Royal Marines and Falkland’s veterans tackle historic Falkland’s kayak In just ten days (12th March 2017)…
Military Resettlement, Business, Training & Recruitment
Ten days until former Royal Marines and Falkland’s veterans tackle historic Falkland’s kayak In just ten days (12th March 2017)…
A collection of stunning three-storey new homes in North Devon could be within easier reach of Forces personnel, thanks to…
Headquarters South West will be running a Job Fair in Tidworth Garrison Theatre on Wednesday 15 March 2017. At the…
A new community group to support serving and out of service emergency service and military personnel has been established to…
Did you know that MoD personnel are given priority when applying to buy a property through shared ownership? It could…
The Suffolk Disabled Anglers’ Forum is the proud winner of this year’s Cosyfeet Community Award. The charity has won £500…
On Wednesday August 10th Nils Bergstrand, the amputee writer and performer of The One Legged Man Show, will unite with…
Win £2,000 – Celebrate Christmas with Forces Mutual Forces Mutual is wishing members of the Military family a very merry…
The D-Day Darlings Remember With The Royal British Legion In the build-up to Remembrance Sunday on 13th November, wartime trio…
A Powerful Watch! A short film for Remembrance Day 2016. A man struggles to determine between past and present as the horrors of The Great War and his civilian life intertwine.
Evaluation of RBLI’s employment support programme, LifeWorks, by New Learning & Work Institute finds 83% of Military veterans achieved positive…
On Wednesday 7 September, South Central Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SCAS) mustered the Military for a special event where…
SSAFA, the Armed Forces charity, has announced that its annual ‘Big Brew Up’ will return between 3rd and 9th October…
Personnel returning from Service with an injury or disability not only face dealing with physical and mental trauma, they also…
After being severely injured in a skiing accident whilst a Physical Training Instructor Sean Rose was determined not to lose…
Harry Sowerby is a Serving Colour sergeant in the Reserves with F Company 7 Rifles. Having joined in 1994, he…
Leading IT employer, FDM Group, has been awarded a Certificate of Support for its commitment to employing Britain’s Reservists. The…
The men’s health charity CHAPS is holding a health screening day to encourage men from Essex and Suffolk to get…
Rewards for Forces have launched an exciting new campaign to find a Charity of the Year who will benefit from…
High court rules that up to 161 allegedly unlawful killings by British military should be subject of coroner-style hearings A series of public inquests should be held into the deaths of civilians who are alleged to have been killed unlawfully by the British military following the 2003 invasion of Iraq, the high court has ruled. In a ground-breaking judgment that could have an impact on how the British military is able to conduct operations among civilians in the future, the court ruled on Friday that up to 161 deaths should be the subject of hearings modelled upon coroners’ inquests.
The family of Drummer Lee Rigby pay tribute to the soldier who was killed in Woolwich
The defence secretary, Philip Hammond, says the military community is deeply saddened by Wednesday’s murder of Drummer Lee Rigby
Military support charity inundated with calls and web traffic over soldier killed while wearing Help for Heroes top Help for Heroes has been swamped with donations, leading to its website crashing, after Drummer Lee Rigby was murdered while wearing one of the charity’s tops. Supporters of the military charity took to social networks in an attempt to boost its coffers after the 25-year-old was killed in Woolwich, south-east London, on Wednesday
Woolwich attack victim who served in Afghanistan during one of worst periods of fighting, dies on London street Lee Rigby was born in Manchester, spent a year in Cyprus, and served for six months in Afghanistan with the military during one of the most violent periods of the 12-year-long conflict. His friends and family could never have imagined that the 25-year-old would lose his life in broad daylight, on a busy London street, at the hands of two men wielding knives and boasting allegiance to a virulent form of Islamist extremism.
Man, 25, killed in Woolwich was drummer in 2nd Battalion The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers and father of two-year-old boy The soldier who was killed in the knife attack in Woolwich has been named as Drummer Lee Rigby, of the 2nd Battalion The Royal Regiment of Fusiliers. The Ministry of Defence released his details on Thursday, a day after the stabbing near the barracks in south London where he had been stationed.