7. Lance Corporal Kylie Watson
Watson joined the Army in 2006, and following a study of battlefield medicine, she joined the Royal Army Medical Corps in 2007. Her desire to help anyone who was hurt, led to her rescuing two people, on her very first tour in Afghanistan.
Whilst patrolling on foot, her platoon came under machine gun fire and one of their Afghan colleagues was shot. Watson immediately ran across 70 metres of open ground to reach the injured man. While the bullets whizzed over their heads, she stopped the bleeding and splintered his broken pelvis, before a helicopter arrived to airlift him.
Six months later, on another foot patrol, her platoon came under heavy fire and one soldier fell. Watson ignored the completely open ground and ran over to tend to his wounds. She gave medical care for 20 minutes, before he was airlifted out.
Awarded the Military Cross in 2011, she was cited for her ‘immense courage and willingness to put her own life at risk.’
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