Ongoing crimes against children
The compensation costs relate to civil claims for historic abuse, but openDemocracy has uncovered that many children are still being sexually abused by British military personnel.
We analysed court martial and service police data to reveal that at least 166 court martial cases that took place between January 2010 and June 2025 included at least one charge of a child sex offence.
In reality, far more service members were likely tried for child sexual offences during this time. Court martials for crimes such as rape or sexual assault do not record the age of the victim, meaning we were able only to look at offences that specifically include the word "child" or "children".
These could include sexual communications with a child, possessing indecent images of a child, making and distributing images of child abuse, sexual activity with a child by a person in a position of trust, indecent assault of a child, and arranging or facilitating the commission of a child sex offence.
There were, however, multiple occasions where a member of the armed forces was tried for rape or sexual assault alongside a specific child sex offence. This was the case for Jessica's* abuser. Last year, we told how she was sexually abused at the age of seven by her 16-year-old babysitter, Martin Roberts, when both parties were living on the British Army base in Germany where their fathers were stationed.
As the dependent of a British Army member at the time of offending in the 1980s, Roberts (who went on to serve in the British armed forces himself) was subject to service law. In July 2024, he was found guilty at court martial of numerous offences against Jessica, including rape and multiple counts of indecency with a child, and sentenced to four years in prison.
Roberts was released after serving a year.
Since 2021, the Service Police have recorded 128 cases of sexual offences where the victim was under-18. Of these, 113 of the victims were serving personnel and 15 were civilians. Earlier data is unavailable, as previous to 2021, the youngest victim demographic was recorded as under-21.
An MoD spokesperson told openDemocracy: "Unacceptable and criminal behaviour has absolutely no place in our Armed Forces. The Defence Serious Crime Command assures all serving personnel that any reporting of a serious crime will be investigated independently from their chain of command and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law."
*Name changed to protect identity
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