British soldier fighting in Kosovo remains homeless, recounts the horror he experienced during the mission

A former British KFOR soldier, who has not wanted to become a public name, has become the first homeless British police officer. Like many others who risk their lives to keep others safe, he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder in 2017. 46 year old, proud father of [...]
Like many others who risk their lives to keep others safe, he was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder in 2017.
The 46-year-old proud father of three shows that as a result of the disorder, his marriage had also failed because, he says, “I became impossible to live with someone”. Then his life sank, and his condition only deteriorated, reports “Mail on Sunday”, Coca.net.
And the state, as this medium writes, without shame she turned her eyes to his case. Following military missions in Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan, he continued his service to London's Metropolitan Police, but from the moment of diagnosis, he took medical leave and that status continues to hold, but, according to the volunteer group handling his case, he has been completely forgotten and allowed the “take down”.
Last month it was the hardest because there was no money left in his pocket. In an interview with the Mail on Sunday”, during which he constantly lost focus, he spoke bitterly of abandoning him, and said that faith in the Army and police in essence has served nothing, and now his life has no greater horizon than to find the next meal.
The former British military man has also spoken of his mission to Kosovo during the 1999 war, where he says he first understood the dangerous role he had taken.
During NATO's entry of ground troops, Serbian military forces were withdrawing, but as long as they were doing so, they systematically fired and executed anyone they found. The bodies had been placed in mass graveyards, and in many cases they had placed mines.
“had introduced programmed explosive devices to explode once a body is removed”, the policeman says.
It was a job to break your nerves. On one occasion, we were with the Belgian gendarmerie at a mass cemetery in a village. After killing the men and burying them, the Serbs had brought them back to earth, changing their clothes to make it difficult to identify. He will never forget the grief and despair of women and children”, the former British commander of KFOR further declares, broadcasts Koha.net.
But he says it was the worst. His team had collected pieces of human bodies scattered as a result of bombs.
“was terrifying and those images affected me today, but then we only carried out the”, has confessed to the former British soldier who did not want to be identified by name.
Despite the hard work he had once done, he became the former soldier and first homeless policeman in Britain.









