A GULF War veteran from Radcliffe who suffered from post-traumatic stress has been named as one of three people from the North West found dead at the foot of the White Cliffs of Dover on New Year’s Day.

Scott Enion, aged 45, is believed to have fallen to his death, which is not being treated as suspicious.

Mr Enion was a former Fusilier who fought in Iraq in the early 1990s.

His family have said he never recovered mentally from seeing his friends blown up in friendly fire.

Upon leaving the Army in 1996, he claimed he had been racially abused.

The coastguard was scrambled to Langdon Cliffs, Kent, on Sunday afternoon following a report of concern over a man.

When Dover lifeboat arrived at the scene, the crew discovered Mr Enion’s body.

But they also found the bodies of a second man and a woman in their 60s, believed to be a brother and sister from Cheshire.

The brother and sister were reportedly found at another spot about half a mile away, and a spokesman for Kent Police said officers are satisfied their deaths were not linked to Mr Enion’s.