FIVE British soldiers shot dead by a rogue Afghan policeman were unlawfully killed, a coroner has ruled.

David Ridley, coroner for Wiltshire and Swindon, recorded the verdict following a four-day inquest in Trowbridge, Wiltshire.

The troops were gunned down without warning by an officer, known only as Gulbuddin, alongside whom they had been living at an Afghan National Police (ANP) checkpoint in Nad-e-Ali, Helmand Province on November 3, 2009.

Corporal Steven Boote, 22, from Prenton, and Corporal Nicholas Webster-Smith, 24, from the Royal Military Police, died alongside Warrant Officer Class 1 Darren Chant, 40, Sergeant Matthew Telford, 37, and Guardsman Jimmy Major, 18, from the Grenadier Guards.

The soldiers were sitting outside in the courtyard of Checkpoint Blue 25 relaxing, having returned earlier that day from a patrol.

Their killer, a regular cannabis smoker, walked up to the soldiers and without warning shot them with an automatic AK47 rifle. He later fled the checkpoint and has never been caught.

The inquest heard harrowing evidence from troops who survived the massacre, describing how the Afghan had been screaming as he indiscriminately fired.

Lance Corporal Liam Culverhouse "played dead" after being shot in the face, arms and legs by Gulbuddin.

"All I could hear was gunfire, scream, gunfire, scream, gunfire, scream, and then it all stopped," L/Cpl Culverhouse said.

The soldier, who was blinded in his right eye, added: "I saw a flash of red out of my uninjured eye and realised I'd been shot.

"At first, I thought it was through a gap in the barbed wire. All I heard was a rifle going off in automatic bursts and Gulbuddin shouting something that was like a war cry."

Speaking after the inquest, Cpl Boote's mother Margaret and his girlfriend, Emma Murray spoke of their pride in him paying the ultimate sacrifice for his country.

In a joint statment they said: "We want Steven to be remembered because he was a hero and because he volunteered to fight for his country.

"He fought very hard to get a place on the team in Afghanistan and he was a highly valued and popular member of the Royal Military Police and of the Grenadier Guards Battle Group.

"Steven paid the ultimate sacrifice for his country and he was immensely proud of what he was doing."