SAOIRSE32

15/6/2005

Martin Ferris

IrishExaminer.com: Ferris calls for arrest probe

Ferris calls for arrest probe

15 June 2005
By Mary Dundon, Political Reporter

SINN Féin deputy Martin Ferris is to ask the Justice Minister Michael McDowell to investigate a case of alleged garda misconduct in Kerry.

Mr Ferris is to raise the case in the Dáil on Friday during the special debate on the second Morris Tribunal Report which was critical of gardaí in Donegal.

The Kerry case involves a man who was arrested in Tralee 16 years ago after a gun was allegedly found in his car and ammunition allegedly found in his home.

The man was held for questioning for 36 hours under Section 30 of the Offences Against the State Act on suspicion of membership of an illegal organisation and a file was sent to the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP).

“First the DPP said this man should be charged in relation to firearms offences, and four months later he directed that no charges should be brought against this man,” Mr Ferris said.

The man in question has maintained his innocence all along and claims the gun and ammunition were planted in his car and home, Mr Ferris added.

The man tried to prove his innocence by getting the serial number of the gun under the Freedom of Information Act.

However, he was refused because the act does not allow records concerning a criminal investigation to be released.

The man’s solicitor then wrote to the gardaí asking them not to destroy the gun in question.

However, he was told that it had been destroyed a month beforehand because of the pending sale of the Dublin army barracks, where the gun and ammunition were stored at the time of the request.

“I will be asking the minister to find out why this material evidence was destroyed.

“This was, after all, evidence that could have been used in a criminal investigation,” Mr Ferris said.

A garda spokesman yesterday said they did not wish to comment on this matter at this time.

Sean Brown’s murder

BBC

Programme revisits 1997 killing


Sean Brown’s body was found in a burned out car

BBC’s Crimewatch programme is reconstructing the 1997 murder of a GAA official killed by loyalists in County Derry as he left his local club.

Sean Brown, 61, was shot dead by the Loyalist Volunteer Force after being abducted in Bellaghy.

A GAA match was recreated for the programme and poet Seamus Heaney and Church of Ireland primate Archbishop Robin Eames interviewed.

Crimewatch producer Michael Armit said it was a particularly brutal murder.

“This is a very significant case for us, because Crimewatch in our 20-year history has only done about seven cases in Northern Ireland,” Mr Armit said.

“Most people are very familiar with the case, although it’s kind of slipped to the back of their consciousness, so the aim of the film is to remind them.”

New investigation

Mr Armit said the killing had been horrendous and “unnecessarily brutal”.

He said he hoped the reconstruction would strike “a very emotional cord, because what we’re hoping is that people’s allegiances have changed in the past seven years”.

Last year Sean Brown’s family reached agreement with the chief constable on how a new investigation should proceed.

It followed a critical report from the police ombudsman on the original RUC investigation into the 1997 killing.

In January 2004, Nuala O’Loan said she had upheld two complaints from Mr Brown’s family about the RUC inquiry into his murder.

These were that the investigation had not been “efficiently and properly carried out” and that “no earnest effort was made to identify those who had carried out the murder”.

A new team of investigators, including officers from outside forces, is carrying out the investigation.

Crimewatch is on BBC1 at 2100 BST on Wednesday.

Lisa Dorrian suspect

BBC

Man held over Lisa killing freed

A man being questioned by police investigating the murder of Bangor woman Lisa Dorrian has been released.

>>>READ it

Suicide awareness mural

Sinn Féin

Gerry Adams MP speaks out on suicides at unveiling of West Belfast mural

Published: 15 June, 2005

Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams, MP for West Belfast praised those responsible for a new mural on suicide awareness which he unveiled this morning in west Belfast.

Speaking today Mr Adams said:

“This initiative is significant for several reasons. It shows the anguish and anger within this community, especially amongst families directly affected by suicide. The abject failure of government Departments to take urgent strategic action to prevent suicide has to be challenged. This morning’s initiative presents an important example of the way forward. The mural was produced by young people who undertook suicide awareness training to better equip themselves to deal with this problem.

“Together with those young people, with families directly affected and with the wider community, Sinn Féin is determined to promote an agenda for action on suicide. A crucial part of this will be the campaign for a suicide prevention strategy and an all-Ireland approach to this problem, which Sinn Féin will launch on 27th June in the Long Gallery at Stormont. I hope that the new direct rule Minister for Health and his counterpart in Dublin will respond with urgency to this campaign.” ENDS

Pearce Gilmore

Belfast Telegraph

Big welcome home for brave Pearce

By Nigel Gould in Coleraine
15 June 2005

It was just what the doctor ordered . . .

After more than two months in America, little Coleraine boy Pearce Gilmore returned home today to his very own street party.

Family, friends and neighbours showed up in force to give the brave youngster a hero’s welcome.

And as car horns tooted and music blared from loudspeakers the 10-year-old, who has made remarkable progress since his special brain operation in early April, stepped out of the family car and declared: “I feel great”.

And there wasn’t a dry eye in the neighbourhood as Pearce said: “I’m glad to be well again.”

Those attending the party then queued up for hugs and kisses from their favourite son.

Dad Seamus said: “It’s great to be back and I have to thank everybody for all their support while we were away.”

Pearce is now finished with his treatment and will have a scan within the next three months just to make sure the tumour in his brain is still shrinking.

During today’s party Pearce joined in the fun with his family and friends.

Mr Charming

BreakingNews.ie

Keep your dirty hands off the North, Ahern told

15/06/2005 - 17:31:05

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Ian Paisley today warned Taoiseach Bertie Ahern: “Keep your dirty hands off Northern Ireland.”

As London and Dublin waited for an IRA statement to signal an end to the Provisionals armed struggle, the Democratic Unionist leader also told republicans any peace pledges would take months to prove.

Mr Paisley ruled out hopes of a swift return to power-sharing involving Sinn Féin after talks with the Taoiseach at the Irish Embassy.

Riled by Mr Ahern’s intervention over this summer’s marching season, the DUP chief went on the offensive.

The 90-minute session was described by Mr Paisley as “brutally frank, absolutely straight”.

He revealed: “I did say that I didn’t want the Taoiseach to put his dirty hands on internal Northern Irish matters and I said it to his face.”

Mr Ahern, who has called for the Orange Order to enter parade negotiations, defended his actions as an attempt to stop trouble flaring in Northern Ireland during the summer.

“We just want to get safely through the parade period,” he said.

“I don’t see how anyone could take offence if they want to see peaceful parades.”

Both men were in agreement, however, that it is time for IRA action on ending all violence, rather than just words.

A response from the Provisionals to Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams call for them to commit to totally democratic means is expected within weeks.

Mr Ahern, who had separate talks with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, insisted the organisation did not necessarily have to disband.

He suggested it could remain as a commemorative body.

Parades and old boys’ reunions could be organised so long as it ceased all paramilitary activity, the Taoiseach said.

But whenever the IRA statement emerges, Mr Ahern said it had to be clear and unambiguous about halting all terrorism and crime, and completing decommissioning.

“It is not just words, it is deeds,” he stressed.

“If we get a statement on the issues I have mentioned, we would be very happy with the statement, but we would naturally enough want to see that they happen.”

With unionist trust in republicans shattered by the £26.5m (€37.8m) Northern Bank heist and the Robert McCartney murder, both blamed on the IRA, Mr Paisley is in no rush to go back into a new power-sharing administration alongside Sinn Féin.

The North Antrim MP, who heads Northern Ireland’s biggest political party, said it would take months for the IRA to first prove any promises were genuine.

He declared: “Everybody has their tongue out waiting for a statement from the IRA. We haven’t got our tongues out.

“What the IRA says is totally meaningless, except we have action.”

Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Hain intensified the pressure on republicans, expressing hope that the devolved institutions could be restored provided the IRA destroy all its weapons.

In his first British House of Commons question time as Northern Ireland Secretary, Mr Hain put the onus firmly on the IRA to end all paramilitary activity and criminality.

“We’ve got to banish the bullet and the bomb and all criminality and paramilitary activity from Northern Ireland’s politics,” he said during Commons question time.

“Now, despite the progress made on that front, it’s still not good enough.”

Sinn Féin MP Conor Murphy urged the British and Irish Governments to impress on unionists the need for a resolution.

Pledging his party’s total commitment to the peace efforts, he said: The process cannot be allowed to stand still any longer.

“They need to make this absolutely clear to the DUP in particular.

“A failure to engage by the DUP cannot allow the process of change to become stalled.”

Eddie McGrady, the SDLP MP for South Down, demanded to know from the British government what would be an acceptable IRA statement.

“It is clear that fudge and ambiguity have only worsened the stalemate we now find ourselves in,” he said.

“I hope that the Governments have learnt this lesson and will set clear standards for the provisional movement and the DUP to live up to.”

Gareth O’Connor

BBC

Canal body missing father-of-two


Gareth O’Connor went missing in May 2003

The body of a man found in a car in Newry Canal was that of missing man Gareth O’Connor, police have said.

His car was pulled out of the canal on Saturday, but DNA tests were needed to identify the body.

The 24-year-old father-of-two from Armagh had been missing since May 2003. Detectives believe Mr O’Connor was killed by the IRA. The IRA denied this.

A police spokesman said detectives were continuing to actively investigate the circumstances of his disappearance.

Mr O’Connnor was reported missing after he failed to report to Dundalk police station in the Irish Republic as part of his bail conditions on a charge of belonging to an illegal paramilitary group.

He had been charged with membership of the dissident republican Real IRA.

He was last spotted on closed-circuit television pictures driving through the County Armagh village of Newtownhamilton.

The blue Volkswagen Golf was discovered close to Victoria Lock near Newry after a two-day operation involving members of the PSNI’s underwater search unit.

Belfast raid

Daily Ireland

Loyalist link to raided centre

The east Belfast office of an Ulster Scots organisation raided by the PSNI yesterday was managed by a leading loyalist.
Until it closed at the beginning of the year, the Gae Lairn centre on the Newtownards Road was run by Frankie Gallagher.
Mr Gallagher is a former independent councillor in the Castlereagh East constituency on the outskirts of Belfast. He lost his seat in May’s elections.
He has close connections to the Ulster Defence Association.
In April, Mr Gallagher’s home in east Belfast was searched by detectives from the serious crime squad, who were investigating money-laundering allegations.
A spokesperson for the PSNI said that yesterday afternoon’s searches at the Gae Lairn centre had been carried out by detectives investigating serious crime.
The April raid on Mr Gallagher’s home occurred just days after east Belfast estate agent Philip Johnston and Jim Gray, the former UDA boss in the area, had been arrested and charged with money laundering.
The raid on Gae Lairn (which is Ulster Scots for “go learn”) is believed to be connected to the same probe.
Computers, financial records and bundles of documents were seized. There were no arrests.
The centre carried out a number of other roles, including youth work, education, and job skills training for loyalist ex-prisoners.
Mr Gallagher was unavailable for comment yesterday.
It is understood that, while he was in charge of the office, the premises were used by a number of loyalist paramilitaries, including Milltown Cemetery murderer Michael Stone and associates of Jim Gray.
Detectives examining Mr Gray’s lifestyle have seized more than 100,000 documents and travelled to five-star hotels in London, Dublin, the Canary Islands and mainland Spain where he is known to have stayed.
The flamboyant loyalist, known for his bleached-blonde hair and year-round tan, was arrested in Co Down in April a week after he had been expelled from the UDA.

Lisa Dorrian

Daily Ireland

Arrest details scarce

by Ciarán Barnes c.barnes@dailyireland.com

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The PSNI has refused to reveal if the 18-year-old man arrested yesterday in connection with the murder of Catholic shop assistant Lisa Dorrian had been questioned before by detectives.
Little details on the arrest were made public, other than the age of the suspect and that he was taken from a location in the greater Belfast area.
Of the three men questioned previously about Ms Dorrian’s murder, one of them was an 18-year-old from the greater Belfast area. It has been four months since the 25-year-old Bangor woman was seen alive.
The Loyalist Volunteer Force (LVF) was originally blamed for killing her over a drug debt.
However, during recent weeks it has emerged that men connected to the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF)-linked Red Hand Commando (RHC) paramilitary organisation may have been responsible.
In a BBC documentary broadcast in May, senior loyalists David Ervine and Winkie Rea claimed the UVF and RHC were ‘investigating’ Ms Dorrian’s disappearance.
It later emerged that the murdered woman’s mobile phone was discovered at the home of a well-known north Down LVF man hours after she went missing.
She was last seen in the company of a teenager in a caravan park in Ballyhalbert, Co Down, during the early hours of February 28.
Ms Dorrian would have celebrated her 26th birthday on Sunday.
The Dorrian family, who are no closer to finding out what happened to their relative, released 26 white balloons over the sea-front in Bangor.
They have also offered a £10,000 (€15,000) reward for information leading to the recovery of Lisa’s body.
Her sister, Joanne, yesterday told Daily Ireland: “The people who killed Lisa know who they are and I believe we know who they are too. But right now all we’re interested in is getting her body back.
“If my sister’s killers and the people involved in hiding her body don’t have the guts to come forward and admit their crimes, then the very least they can do is let us know where they left her.
“Perhaps somewhere deep inside one of them there is be a tiny bit of humanity. These people have nothing to lose now – they have committed the ultimate crime.
“They can never make amends for what they did to my beautiful sister but they can make an effort to end the pain we’re going through of not having a body to bury and a place to grieve.”

Asbestos protest

BBC

Council opposes asbestos proposal


Dozens of protesters picketed council offices

A council in County Down has opposed a plan for an asbestos storage site, following a protest by residents.

Residents in Newtownards held the protest on Tuesday over a proposal to build the facility in the shadow of the town’s Scrabo tower.

Protestors gathered outside Ards Borough Council offices, as the company seeking planning permission for the site set out its case to the council.

Residents’ spokesman Dave Pennick welcomed the council decision.

“The number of people protesting last night combined with the unanimous support of the Ards Borough Councillors clearly demonstrates the depth of local feeling on this issue,” he said.

“There is absolutely no support whatsoever in Ards Borough for the AES Marconi application to build an Asbestos Transfer Station beside Scrabo Country Park.”

He said there were now plans to seek meetings with the planning service.

“We want to see this application refused and thrown out.”

Mr Pennick has said the idea of an asbestos transfer station was “adding to the dangers for us all”.

Mr Pennick has also said the Environment Heritage Service needed to have a planned strategy for the permanent disposal of asbestos.

At the start of this month, residents opposed to plans for a temporary asbestos storage site in Crumlin, County Antrim, lodged papers for a judicial review of the decision to approve the plant.

Denis Bradley

BBC

Bradley ’stopped officer murder’


Denis Bradley said he stopped the IRA murdering a police officer

The vice chairman of the Policing Board has revealed he stopped the IRA from killing a policeman in Derry during the 1970s.

Denis Bradley said he did so at the request of the local RUC commander at the time, the late Frank Lagan.

He said he was contacted by Mr Lagan, who died last week, to get the attack called off as he feared Special Branch was going to “sacrifice the officer”.

He said he persuaded the IRA to call it off just before it was to happen.

“He (Mr Lagan) had got information that the Special Branch knew of an operation that the IRA were about to do and the Special Branch were going to let it go ahead even though it would have involved one of their own officers being killed,” Mr Bradley said.

“He asked me to go and stop it, about an hour before it happened if I could get in touch with somebody to stop it.

“He said to me: ‘This is crazy if we let this kind of stuff go on’.”

Mr Bradley, a former priest, was involved in community and mediation work in Derry for many years.

He has been the target of threats and attacks by dissident republicans since taking his position on the Policing Board.

Manchester bombing

BBC

ON THIS DAY

15 June 1996 - IRA bombing of Manchester city centre

‘The whole city shook’

The bomb that exploded in the centre of Manchester on 15 June 1996 was the second largest used by the IRA in an attack on the British mainland.


The moment before the blast: CCTV footage of the van containing the bomb

Although no one was killed in the blast, the device caused massive damage to the Arndale shopping centre - smashing almost every window in a half-mile radius.


The explosion caused extensive damage to Manchester city centre

And the explosion was so powerful it could be heard several miles away.

Police managed to evacuate 75,000 people from the busy shopping area after receiving a warning, but 200 people were still injured in the attack.

**As reported:

1996: Huge explosion rocks central Manchester

A massive bomb has devastated a busy shopping area in central Manchester.

Two hundred people were injured in the attack, mostly by flying glass, and seven are said to be in a serious condition. Police believe the IRA planted the device.

The bomb exploded at about 1120 BST on Corporation Street outside the Arndale shopping centre.

It is the seventh attack by the Irish Republican group since it broke its ceasefire in February and is the second largest on the British mainland.

A local television station received a telephone warning at 1000 BST - just as the city centre was filling up with Saturday shoppers.

The caller used a recognised IRA codeword.

One hour and 20 minutes after the warning, police were still clearing hundreds of people from a huge area of central Manchester.

Army bomb disposal experts were using a remote-controlled device to examine a suspect van parked outside Marks & Spencer when it blew up in an uncontrolled explosion.

Glass wounds

Many of those injured were outside the police cordon.

Seventy bystanders were ferried to three hospitals in ambulances. Others walked or were taken by friends.

A consultant at Hope Hospital said most of the seriously injured - including a pregnant woman thrown 15 ft (4.6 m) into the air - had suffered deep glass wounds which would require surgery.

Prime Minister John Major insisted the multi-party Northern Ireland peace talks begun last week would continue, but called on Sinn Fein - the political wing of the IRA - to condemn the attack and demand a ceasefire.

In Context

The IRA’s 1996 post-ceasefire campaign focused entirely on UK mainland attacks.

The group broke its truce on 9 February 1996 with a huge bomb in London’s Docklands which killed two people.

Within 10 weeks, the Irish Republicans had planted five other devices - all of them in London.

They included the Aldwych bus bomb, which blew up prematurely and killed the suspected bomber.

Another IRA ceasefire has held since 1997 and opened the way for IRA political wing Sinn Fein to join multi-party talks on the future of Northern Ireland.

However, IRA splinter groups have continued to carry out attacks in Ireland and Britain.

Education strike

BreakingNews.ie

Northern education staff strike over pay

15/06/2005 - 08:38:52

More than 2,000 education staff in the North are taking part in a one-day strike over pay today.

The North’s exams body said scheduled papers would not be affected by the industrial action.

The walkout, which has been called by NIPSA, involves classroom assistants in the five Education and Library Boards.

A second strike will take place on Friday, when about 2,600 NIPSA members in both the South Eastern and the Belfast Education and Library Boards will walk out in opposition against recent cutbacks.

The Council for the Curriculum, Examinations and Assessment reassured pupils preparing for GCSE, GCE and Key Skills papers that their exams would not be disrupted by the two days of industrial action.

Tommy Wright, NIPSA assistant secretary, said it was time classroom assistants, including nursery and general assistants, were given a better deal.

Mr Wright said: “It is regrettable that this group of workers, who deliver vital services in schools throughout Northern Ireland, are compelled to take strike action because of the failure of their employers to resolve outstanding pay issues.

“Management must accept that their failure to resolve these matters is having a substantial impact on the morale of staff, which is leading to disillusionment, and this is bad for education.”

Asbestos site protest

BBC

Protest held over asbestos plans


Residents are opposed to plans for an asbestos storage site

Residents in Newtownards have held a protest against a proposal to build an asbestos storage site in the shadow of the town’s Scrabo tower.

The protestors gathered outside Ards Borough Council offices, as the company seeking planning permission for the site set out its case to the council.

Residents’ spokesman Dave Pennick said they have serious concerns about the safety of AES Marconi’s proposals.

Mr Pennick called for the plans to be scrapped.

“This idea of an asbestos transfer station is not required, it’s adding to the dangers for us all,” he said.

“It’s not just about Newtownards suffering this, we need to be careful - it could be in your back garden or behind you.”

Mr Pennick said the Environment Heritage Service needed to have a planned strategy for the permanent disposal of asbestos.

At the start of this month residents opposed to plans for a temporary asbestos storage site in Crumlin, County Antrim, lodged papers for a judicial review of the decision to approve the plant.






















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