Former Special Forces soldier Andy McNab has launched petition to help find a home for a fellow SAS veteran who was hailed for his role in the Iranian Embassy siege of 1980.
After serving as a sergeant in the elite force, Bob Curry claims he has been left without somewhere to live as Herefordshire County Council failed to find him housing.
The authority says he has ‘not provided all the documentation needed to legally register for housing’, and has turned down accommodation which has been offered.
Bob Curry, 64, was forced to ask for help from the SAS after Herefordshire Council failed to provide any accommodation
Former SAS soldier Andy McNab, pictured, has urged Herefordshire County Council to find a suitable home for Bob Curry who is currently living in B&B paid for by the regiment
SAS hero Bob Curry is pictured in his SAS days, during which he saw action in the Falklands War and Northern Ireland
Mr McNab has started a petition on Charge.org calling for a suitable, permanent property to be given to Mr Curry, garnering more than 8,300 signatures in a matter of hours.
On the fundraising page Mr McNab said: ‘After his small business failed, this proud veteran lost his home and his way. He is not getting the help he needs from the authorities.
‘Instead he is reliant on handouts from the SAS Regimental Association who are paying for him to live in a B&B.’
Mr Curry was part of the team that brought the six-day siege to an end after a group of six men stormed the embassy and took 26 people hostage.
The 64-year-old said he is living in a B&B after he split up with his partner of 25 years and his business collapsed last year.
He said he was told by Herefordshire council to fill in forms for a council house in November but is still waiting to hear if he meets the criteria, The Sun reported.
Mr Curry told the newspaper he hated going ‘cap in hand’ to his local authority to ask for help, but he had ‘no choice’.
He said the council offered him a place at a hostel but he could only bear staying there for two nights and spent last month sleeping on his daughter’s sofa.
‘It was as if the society I had fought for all my life had turned its back on me,’ he told The Sun.
‘If this can happen to me, it can happen to any veteran. And it is happening to veterans all over the country.’
In a statement the council said it was continuing to work with Mr Curry to help him ‘secure appropriate housing’.
‘Unfortunately, to date the individual has not provided all the documentation needed to legally register for housing,’ the authority said.
‘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.’
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.
He earlier 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.
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
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 11-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.
According to Mr Coult (pictured), the regiment is currently paying for the veteran to stay in a local B&B for several months.
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.
He asked five times, it was claimed, but they offered him two homes which allegedly he claims were not suitable.
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.
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
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.