Military pensions considered for remarried widows
- Published
The government is considering "options" to address calls to restore military pensions to widows who remarried before 2015.
The Ministry of Defence has told BBC News NI that it is "sympathetic to the circumstances of widows who remarried, or cohabited, before 1 April 2015".
A spokesperson said they were "carefully considering the potential options".
The move could benefit widows of UDR soldiers killed during the Troubles.
Part-time soldier Ronnie Finlay was shot dead by the IRA in County Tyrone in 1983.
He was leaving his civilian job at the former Adria factory in Strabane when he was attacked.
He was 32 and had three young children, aged between nine years and nine months.
UDR Widows
His widow Elizabeth Morris got a military pension after his death but, like many other UDR widows, the pension was withdrawn when she remarried.
She believes the decision was disrespectful to the memory of her husband.
She said: "To me, as I say, he was just a number. They didn't care, really, at the end of the day. He was just a number there.
"We deserve to have our pension back. We should never have lost the pension in the first place and I speak for a lot of widowed women who feel the same as myself."
A campaign by Mrs Morris and other UDR widows to have their pensions restored has similarities to a previous campaign by RUC widows.
Lost pensions
Victims campaigners have told the BBC that other widows, across the UK, also lost their military pension when they remarried.
The Ministry of Defence said: "The government recognises the unique commitment that service families make to our country and remains sympathetic to the circumstances of those widows who remarried, or cohabited before 1 April 2015.
"However, this is a complex policy area and is taking time to carefully consider the potential options within both financial and legal constraints."
Mrs Morris has appealed to the government to "think again" and "take it very seriously this time and give us widows our pension back".
- Published8 June 2016