Iranian Embassy hero living in hostel with addicts

An SAS hero who was the first to climb inside during the Iranian Embassy siege was placed in a hostel with addicts and offenders – all while the terrorist jailed for his role in the siege enjoys a ‘playboy’ lifestyle funded by benefits.

Last month Bob Curry, who served for 16 years in the Special Air Service and had a 17-year military career, was given a ‘shoe box’ room by the council in a hostel.

The 64-year-old claims there was a 10pm curfew but the worst part of the hostel experience was the fact that the toilets downstairs were kept locked, meaning he had to ask a warden for permission to use it.

Mr Curry told The Sun: ‘The hostel experience was my lowest ebb.

‘I had served my country all my working life and never thought it would come to this in a place with more security cameras than a prison.’ 

He is now living in a B&B paid for by his old regiment, but was previously forced to live on the streets after Herefordshire Council failed to find him housing.

Mr Curry added: ‘I went to make a cuppa with a kettle in the room and realised it contained urine. Someone had used it as a potty and hurled wee out of the window. It was disgusting.

‘I lay on the camp bed and thought about all the missions I had done in the regiment. I’m 65 next month, a pensioner, and I was having to ask a bloke permission to use the toilet.

‘I may as well have been in a ditch like the regiment days. I just felt humiliated. I stood it for two nights then had to leave.’

Meanwhile Fowzi Nejad, 61, the only terrorist to survive the siege in 1980, cannot be sent back to Iran because of human rights laws so instead lives in Peckham, south London. 

 

Fowzi Nejad, 61, the only terrorist to survive the siege in 1980, cannot be sent back to Iran because of human rights laws so instead lives in Peckham, south London (shown in 2008)

SAS hero Bob Curry is pictured in his SAS days, during which he saw action in the Falklands War and Northern Ireland

SAS hero Bob Curry is pictured in his SAS days, during which he saw action in the Falklands War and Northern Ireland

Mr Curry, 64, was forced to ask for help from the SAS after Herefordshire Council failed to provide any accommodation

Mr Curry, 64, was forced to ask for help from the SAS after Herefordshire Council failed to provide any accommodation

The 61-year-old has a plush flat with its own balcony, and as of May was living rent-free.

The chain-smoker became eligible for parole three years ago after serving 28 years in jail and his application was approved in October 2008. 

Other heroes from the siege such as Warrant Officer Ian ‘Chalky’ White are struggling to stay afloat, with Mr White selling his hard-earned medals for cash.

Their issues are in stark contrast to Nejad. A friend of his previously told The Sun: ‘He lives off benefits and is on disability because he has a bad back.

‘He also loves a night out in the West End and he has an eye for the ladies. He will say, “I went out, had a drink and got some p****”. It’s a proper playboy lifestyle.’ 

Nejad and five other gunmen forced their way into the embassy in West London in April 1980, demanding independence for part of southern Iran and taking 26 hostages.

They killed a hostage after six days, which led then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher to order the SAS to storm the building. A second hostage was killed in the attack.

Nejad tried to hide among the hostages, but was caught and sentenced to life in jail for conspiracy to murder, false imprisonment, possession of a firearm and two charges of manslaughter. 

He was rumbled by heroes including Ian White, who sold his old medals last year to pay off his mortgage and finally retire.

Mr White, who served in the military for 25 years, said Britain should do more to help ex-servicemen.

Speaking in November, the ex-commando said: ‘This is not a cry of poverty, it is my decision. I am end-gaming. I am trying to make a better life to finish with rather than be spluttering about.

Warrant Officer Ian 'Chalky' White

Warrant Officer John Thompson

Warrant Officer Ian ‘Chalky’ White (left) and Warrant Officer John Thompson (right), both veterans of the 1980 siege, have sold their medals since ending their military careers

Mr White, who served in the military for 25 years, said Britain should do more to help ex-servicemen

Mr White, who served in the military for 25 years, said Britain should do more to help ex-servicemen

Ian White had to sell of his old medals (shown) last year to pay off his mortgage and retire

Ian White had to sell of his old medals (shown) last year to pay off his mortgage and retire

‘It would be nice to think that I didn’t have to do it. I know there are a lot of guys (ex-servicemen) who are up against it and maybe they could get more help.

‘In America their veterans get money off this, that and the other but here there is a great amount of “let’s diss the forces”. Those people should stand up and take the bullets rather than stand behind them and diss them.’ 

Mr Curry, who helped to save 19 hostages during the embassy seige, has now warned that homelessness could happen ‘to any veteran’.

After his time in the hostel he lived on a camp bed in his 26-year-old daughter’s home, but now the Legion and SAS charities have given him a place in a B&B for 28 days.

He told The Sun: ‘It was as if the society I had fought for all my life had turned its back on me.

‘I’ve been in tough spots through my career but with my health now I wouldn’t have survived long on the streets — SAS training or not.

‘I was sat in the council offices explaining my life to someone who looked at me as though I was nothing. I hated it but I had no choice.’

Mr Curry had also been offered a room in a sheltered old peoples home, but this is unsuitable because of how old the other residents are in comparison to Mr Curry who is in his 60s.

Herefordshire council have warned that it could be months before they find Mr Curry a home. 

The former sergeant, who has had two heart attacks and is registered disabled and a diabetic, saw action during the Falklands War and also served in Northern Ireland.

He became penniless after the breakdown of his marriage and the loss of his home following the collapse of his business in July.  

Fowzi Nejad arrives at court in a prison van

Nejad tried to hide among the hostages, but was caught and sentenced to life in jail

Fowzi Nejad arrives at court in a prison van (pictured left). Nejad tried to hide among the hostages, but was caught and sentenced to life in jail

Mr Curry stormed the Iranian Embassy during the iconic 1980 raid but is now living in a B&B because the council cannot find him a home

Mr Curry stormed the Iranian Embassy during the iconic 1980 raid but is now living in a B&B because the council cannot find him a home

Fellow veteran Trevor Coult, a recipient of the Military Cross, revealed the soldier's plight in a tweet today, provoking the anger or many other social media users

Fellow veteran Trevor Coult, a recipient of the Military Cross, revealed the soldier’s plight in a tweet today, provoking the anger or many other social media users

Warrant Officer John Thompson also sold of his medals, back in 2012, after finding out how valuable they were after going on the ITV antiques programme Real Deal.

Mr Thompson was one of a SAS team flown into London by helicopter who then stormed the building by abseiling from the roof in a successful rescue bid that killed five of the terrorists.

Thompson and one of his three colleagues from A squadron were sent to the front of building where they fired gas canisters into the embassy – and were pictured doing so. 

Former police man Trevor Lock, who was among the hostages taken during the siege, called for action to be taken to help Mr Curry. 

The 78-year-old told the MailOnline: ‘It’s such a sad situation. Nobody deserves to be homeless, especially those who have been in the military, but that is just my opinion.

‘Different people deal with situations in different ways. I don’t know his circumstances but some people struggle to deal with civvy life and adapting to it all.

‘I feel very sorry for him and wish him well. He was the best of the best and now he is in this position. It needs sorting as far as I’m concerned.’

According to Mr Coult (pictured), the regiment is currently paying for the veteran to stay in a local B&B for several months.

According to Mr Coult (pictured), the regiment is currently paying for the veteran to stay in a local B&B for several months.

Former sergeant Trevor Coult, who was awarded the Military Cross in 2006 for his bravery in a machine-gun ambush involving suicide bombers and gunmen in Baghdad, was made aware of his plight. 

Mr Coult, who has spoken to the homeless veteran, told the Mail: ‘This hero abseiled in and went through one of the windows with a charge and cleared rooms.

‘He eliminated targets in the Iranian embassy.

‘It is a disgrace this veteran is not being looked after. If we can’t sort out these veterans in Hereford, where they lived, then what hope is there for other heroes?’

It is understood the regiment had been paying for the B&B for around a month.

In 2015 the SAS veteran put his medals up for sale for £25,000 so they could be enjoyed by collectors. 

He was one of the first to break into the besieged London building in May 1980 after 26 people were held hostage by six armed Iranian dissidents.

The special forces soldier, aged 27 at the time, was watched by millions of TV news viewers as he smashed open a window with a sledgehammer, allowing his colleagues to sensationally storm the building. 

The Iranian embassy siege: The day the SAS emerged from the shadows

The siege began when a group of six gunmen stormed into the Iranian embassy in South Kensington, London, on April 30, 1980.

They took mostly embassy staff hostage but among them was BBC sound recordist Sim Harris who was at the embassy to get a visa.

PC Trevor Locke, a member of the diplomatic protection squad and on duty at the building, was also among those held at gunpoint.

The terrorists demanded the release of prisoners in Khuzestan Province in southern Iran during a series of tense negotiations with the police who sealed off the embassy and surrounding streets. The gunmen also demanded safe passage out of the Britain.

The veteran was among those who took part in the famous SAS raid of the Iranian embassy in 1980

The veteran was among those who took part in the famous SAS raid of the Iranian embassy in 1980

After becoming frustrated with the lack of progress over five days they shot one of the hostages and threw his body out of the embassy.

The death was the signal for the SAS – motto Who Dares Wins – to be sent in.

The SAS teams, who had arrived secretly in London from their Hereford base, were given permission by Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher to carry out a rescue mission given the code name Operation Nimrod.

On the evening of May 5 TV news cut into normal programming to broadcast the beginning of the end of the siege as the SAS soldiers all clad in black abseiled down the front of the building.

Millions watched in awe as they tossed stun grenades into the building to begin their assault.

BBC cameraman Sim Harris was captured scurrying to safety, jumping over a balcony, while smoke billowed from the building after a curtain caught fire.

What was unseen by cameras were the other teams – including Horsfall and Firmin – sweeping through the building in a race to free the hostages before they were shot.

The raid lasted just 17 minutes and all but one of the six gunmen were shot and killed.

A second hostage was shot dead by the gunmen and two others seriously wounded.

The televised raid was the first time the British public had ever seen the Special Forces soldiers in action and elevated them to superstar status. 

Fawsi Najad, the surviving gunman, was jailed for life and freed in 2008 after serving 27 years. He was granted leave to remain in the UK. 

The 17-minute mission, which became a seminal moment in SAS history, was ordered by home secretary William Whitelaw on the sixth day of the siege after the terrorists shot dead a member of staff before dumping his body outside the embassy.

As millions of Britons watched the drama unfold, Curry ran towards the building, despite the risk that a failed explosive which was due to blow open a way into the embassy could still go off.

He then kicked the charge out of the way, smashed the window and was the first to climb inside. 

His heroic actions allowed a crack squad of four SAS soldiers to enter the rear of the building in South Kensington and clear the ground floor and the cellar.

Five gunmen were killed and one was arrested. Although one hostage died, 19 were freed.

Afterwards, one SAS hero was awarded the George Medal and four others were given the Queen’s Gallantry Medal but Curry was not one of them.

He did however earn campaign medals for his service in Northern Ireland and the Falklands War.

It is understood he was made homeless after he split from his wife last year and contacted the council asking for accommodation. 

The televised raid was the first time the British public had ever seen the Special Forces soldiers in action and elevated them to superstar status

The televised raid was the first time the British public had ever seen the Special Forces soldiers in action and elevated them to superstar status

He asked five times, it was claimed, but they offered him two homes which were allegedly unsuitable.

Curry was born in Cambridgeshire in 1953 and enlisted in the Royal Anglian Regiment as a 15 year-old junior soldier in 1968.

After serving in Northern Ireland, he passed the tough selection course for the SAS in 1979, training as an assault team member specialising in storming buildings held by terrorists. 

After the Iranian Embassy siege he served with the SAS in the Falklands War and Northern Ireland.

Discharged in 1985, he spent three years working for the Al Fayed family, including one year as the personal bodyguard of Dodi Al Fayed, later killed alongside Diana, Princess of Wales in a Paris car crash.

A spokesman for Herefordshire Council confirmed an agreement was yet to be reached on a home for the veteran, but said two offers had been made.

A statement read: ‘Herefordshire Council can confirm that it is actively working with this individual to secure accommodation within the county.

‘Unfortunately, to date the individual has not provided all the documentation needed to legally register for housing.

‘However, regardless of this, the council’s housing team has found and offered two different forms of accommodation, in areas which were agreeable to the individual, but which have subsequently been turned down.

‘We are continuing to work with the individual to help them secure appropriate housing.’

SAS veteran was forced to put his medals up for sale for £25,000

As millions of Britons watched the drama unfold, Curry ran towards the building, despite the risk that a failed explosive which was due to blow open a way into the embassy could still go off.

He then kicked the charge out of the way, smashed the window and was the first to climb inside.

His heroic actions allowed a crack squad of four SAS soldiers to enter the rear of the building in South Kensington and clear the ground floor and the cellar.

Five gunmen were killed and one was arrested. Although one hostage died, 19 were freed.

Mr Curry (far right) led the Iranian Embassy siege in 1980, after six gunmen took hostages

Mr Curry (far right) led the Iranian Embassy siege in 1980, after six gunmen took hostages

Afterwards, one SAS hero was awarded the George Medal and four others were given the Queen’s Gallantry Medal but Curry was not one of them.

He did however earn campaign medals for his service in Northern Ireland and the Falklands War. 

The items, which were sold alongside his SAS beret, his belt and his winged badge, made around £25,000 in auction.

Included in the auction were several photos of Curry in action during the siege with a dedication written on them by ‘Soldier I’ – fellow SAS soldier Pete Winner.



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