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View Full Version : Well done Girl, Well done.


John A Silkstone
10-08-06, 18:04
A 19-year old female Army medic serving in Iraq braved sniper fire to save the life of a critically injured colleague.

Private Michelle Norris, 19, from Stourbridge, West Midlands, climbed on top of a Warrior armoured vehicle to reach her vehicle commander who had been injured during a fire fight in Maysaan Province in June

Private Norris, known as ‘Chuck’, was part of a Warrior patrol in support of the Iraqi Security Forces in Al Amarah, Maysaan Province, which came under attack while it was trying to recover another Warrior that had become stuck in a ditch.

Private Norris described her reaction to the incident:
"It brought it home to me and I realised why I was here. It was my first casualty since training, which was pretty scary. On arrival at the scene, we stopped and when I heard ‘pings’ on the Warrior, I thought it was stones.
Then I heard the turret get hit, so I got onto the intercom and asked ‘is anyone hit?’ but there was no answer. All of a sudden, the driver (Private Nani Ratawake) shouted down to me that my commander had been hit.

I didn’t know where he’d been shot and how bad it was at this stage. So I jumped out the back of the Warrior, climbed up on top of the turret, looked down, and saw the extent of his injuries.

I then heard the crack and a thump of a round going past my head. I was under fire from a sniper, which luckily just missed me.

Ratawake pulled me down head first into the turret. A round went over and hit a battery which was at my knee height, so if he hadn’t pulled me down at that point, my knee or my leg would have been shot.

We managed to cross the turret and get my commander into the back, where one of the lads put a sweat rag over him. I got through and administered first aid, put a dressing on and checked his vital signs.

The Warrior driver, Private Nani Ratawake, known as ‘Destroyer’, then drove to the helicopter landing point to take the casualty to a military field hospital.

Commenting on the actions of Pte Norris, her Commanding Officer,
Lieutenant Colonel David Labouchere MBE, said: "Private Norris acted completely selflessly and, in the face of great danger. She concentrated on her job and saved someone else’s life. She is part of a larger team, all of whom are acquitting themselves admirably when faced with danger."
As the only female in C Company, she gets on with the lads.

"It’s good," she concluded. "I’ve always been one of the lads anyway. Most of my friends in ‘Civvy Street’ have always been lads, and I always used to play football at school, so it’s alright, I get on with them."

Private Norris, from the Royal Army Medical Corps, only recently qualified as a medic and is currently serving on her first tour of Iraq. She is attached to C Company 1st Battalion ‘The Princess of Wales’s Royal Regiment’ (PWRR), normally based in Paderborn, Germany. 1 PWRR are currently half way through a six-and-a-half month tour of Iraq as part of 20th Armoured Brigade, and are due to return home to Paderborn in November.

The thing that angers me, is that this event took place in June and the Army are only just telling us about it now. We hear all the bad stuff about Iraq at once, so why has this good action taken over six weeks to reach us?

Silky

Hollis
10-08-06, 18:07
This news made my day. Excellent person, now if the world had more people like her.

John A Silkstone
10-08-06, 19:24
Here is some more info that I'vejust got hold of. Silky


Her sergeant, who had been shot in the mouth, was later flown by helicopter to a military field hospital.

Pte Norris, 19, who is nicknamed Chuck after the film star, is attached to C Company, 1 Bn the Princess of Wales Royal Regiment. She was part of a patrol in support of the Iraqi security forces in Al Amarah, in the Maysaan province, which came under attack while it was trying to recover a Warrior vehicle that had become stuck in a ditch.

Her commanding officer, Lt Col David Labouchere, is recommending her for a top award for gallantry.

He said: "Pte Norris acted completely selflessly and in the face of great danger concentrated on her job and saved someone else's life.

"She is part of a larger team, all of whom are acquitting themselves admirably when faced with danger."

Pte Norris's mother, Susan, 55, said her daughter had tried to make light of her heroics when she telephoned home after the incident.

Mrs Norris, from Stourbridge, West Mids, said: "I knew there had been an incident and I knew she was in a difficult situation but Michelle played it down.

"When I realised the full enormity of it I broke down and cried. It was a mix of horror that she could have died and pride over what she had done.

"I just thank God she is alive. I'm so proud of her. We are all very, very proud."

Mrs Norris said she and her husband Peter, 58, had not wanted their daughter - the youngest of their three children - to join up, but said they had supported her all the way.

Mr Norris said: "I'd prefer it if she was working in McDonald's or something like that but that wouldn't be Michelle.

"She gets on with all the lads out there. She's a bit of a ladette."

Mrs Norris added that when her daughter had described the incident, which happened in June, she said she was just "doing her job".

"She told me 'this is what I joined for'. She really gets on with her sergeant, who took her under his wing. She thinks he's brilliant.

"The sergeant's mum sent over a parcel with a thank you letter. That was a lovely touch.

"I'm so worried about her and I haven't slept properly since she went to Iraq.

"I gave up smoking for six weeks but when she went over to Iraq I started again.

"Michelle has always wanted to be in the Army since she was 11 when she joined the Cadets. It has always been something that has interested her. It really fascinated her.

"Michelle is just a down-to-earth, happy-go-lucky girl who would help anybody if she could.

"She keeps on saying, 'don't worry about me, mum', but I can't help it."

An MoD spokesman said: "Once the dust settles and her commanding officer puts in his citation of events, she may well be cited for an award."


In Arduis Fidelis. The RAMC motto = "Faithful in adversity."

Drone_pilot
10-08-06, 19:31
An MoD spokesman said: "Once the dust settles and her commanding officer puts in his citation of events, she may well be cited for an award."

I Hope it's the highest we can award IE: the V.C. as she deserves it.

Bombardier
10-08-06, 19:42
VC is the very least award she should receive. Well done indeed, we are very proud of you (Y)

Matzos
11-08-06, 09:24
The lady in question

http://www.militaryimages.net/imagehost/images/Matzos/20bde20061600407michellenorris.jpg

John A Silkstone
11-08-06, 11:30
Thanks for the photo of the lady. However as a medic and under the Geneva Convention, she appears to be carrying the wrong type of weapon.

Silky

Matzos
11-08-06, 11:56
Silky I found this:

Article 13.-Discontinuance of protection of civilian medical units
1. The protection to which civilian medical units are entitled shall not cease unless they are used to commit, outside their humanitarian function, acts harmful to the enemy. Protection may, however, cease only after a warning has been given setting, whenever appropriate, a reasonable time-limit, and after such warning has remained unheeded.
2. The following shall not be considered as acts harmful to the enemy;
( a ) That the personnel of the unit are equipped with light individual weapons for their own defence or for that of the wounded and sick in their charge;
( b ) That the unit is guarded by a picket or by sentries or by an escort;
( c ) That small arms and ammunition taken from the wounded and sick, and not yet handed to the proper service, are found in the units;
( d ) That members of the armed forces or other combatants are in the unit for medical reasons.

Source - Protocol (http://www.ohchr.org/english/law/protocol1.htm)

I'm unsure if this covers her carrying the SA80?

Bombardier
11-08-06, 21:03
The lady in question

http://www.militaryimages.net/imagehost/images/Matzos/20bde20061600407michellenorris.jpg

Feckin good girl solthum (Y) sal;

John A Silkstone
11-08-06, 22:00
A med is only allowed to carry a side arm or a light SMG and is not allowed to use it other than in self defence.

One of my fellow sergeants had to go to the International Court in Hage because he was caught with an SLR on the streets of Belfast.

However these days I believe the SMGs now have a silencer and are mostly used by Special Forces.

Silky

Reloader
13-08-06, 20:45
Well done, that woman! She deserves an honour.salute;

ArcticWolf
14-08-06, 15:05
She certainly deserves a vc;
God bless her and all the likeminded soldiers out there. sal;