SAOIRSE32

17/12/2005

Anti-corruption body to examine Ireland

BreakingNews.ie

**Getting so much money, which could be better spent, to reveal the obvious is corrupt if you ask me.

17/12/2005 - 16:36:26

One of the world’s leading anti-corruption bodies has confirmed that it has received Government funding to carry out an audit of the problem here in Ireland in the New Year.

‘Transparency International’ - which set up a branch here this year - is getting a grant of €50,000 to see whether the laws and structures to tackle corruption in Ireland are up to scratch.

Chairman of the group, Colm McCarthy says they won’t just be scrutinising the Government, but will also examine business organisations and international bodies.

Adams: ‘securocrats’ behind crisis

Irish Examiner

**Keep talking, Gerry…

17 December 2005
By Michael O’Farrell, Political Reporter

SINN Féin President Gerry Adams yesterday accused “out of control” securocrats of attempting to orchestrate another peace process crisis as he identified senior party member Denis Donaldson as a British agent. Speaking at a press conference in Dublin yesterday afternoon, Mr Adams said it was his belief that rogue members of the security services, intent on opposing the peace process, planned to out Mr Donaldson for political purposes.

“They hate republicans with a passion and for them the war isn’t over. For them the Good Friday Agreement was a huge mistake. For them Tony Blair should have let them get at the Republicans. They are the people who continue to operate within the special branch of the PSNI. They are the people who orchestrated the raid in Stormont.

“Here you have a situation, against a background of British policy being informed entirely by securocrats and by the security community, and within that a core that won’t let go, and they are the people who are manipulating the situation.”

Mr Adams said Mr Donaldson had come to Sinn Féin after the PSNI warned him he was about to be ousted and his life was in danger.

Mr Adams said he had never suspected Mr Donaldson but had always been suspicious about the way the Stormont Assembly had been suspended.

“I was very, very suspicious when the events of 2002 unfolded, when we saw this hugely-orchestrated operation up at Stormont because we knew there was no Sinn Féin/IRA spy ring.

“I certainly instinctively knew that there was something wrong in the middle of it. More recently when this case collapsed, that suspicion was deepened.”

Mr Adams said Mr Donaldson would not have had access to top Sinn Féin files.

“He obviously had access to the Stormont Assembly team and the administration of that. He is a long-time member of Sinn Féin so he would have been on friendly terms with many people in Sinn Féin. He was not a member of our negotiating team. He’s not a member of our Ard Comhairle. He’s not involved in any of the senior leadership forums within the party but, yes, he was a long standing member.”

British spy operated at heart of Sinn Fein for more than 20 years

Times Online

By David Sharrock, Ireland Correspondent

THE closed and secretive world of Irish republicanism was thrown into turmoil last night after one of Gerry Adams’s most trusted lieutenants admitted that he had been a British agent for 20 years.

Denis Donaldson, who was acquitted last week of charges of leading an IRA spy ring in the “Stormontgate” affair that ended Northern Ireland’s power-sharing executive three years ago, was a member of Belfast’s republican elite, whose credentials in the fight to end British rule in Ireland would, until now, have been regarded as unimpeachable.

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Denis Donaldson: Evolution of a tout…

But after he was “outed” yesterday and thrown out of Sinn Fein by Mr Adams, who shared a cell block with him during the 1970s when Mr Donaldson, 55, was welcomed into the inner sanctum of “Young Turks” who took control of the republican movement, the question raised in West Belfast was: “If Denis, then who else?” Mr Donaldson’s extraordinary confession came a week after he and two other men, including his son-in-law, were sensationally acquitted of charges of possession of sensitive security documents, which resulted in the forced rehousing of 2,000 people at a cost of £300 million.

In one remarkable — and, for Mr Donaldson, extremely lucky — respect, his expulsion from Sinn Fein, the political wing of the Provisional IRA, also marks a significant departure from the traditional fate of a republican charged by his or her own comrades of “working for the Brits”.

It is not unreasonable to suggest that only six months ago, prior to the IRA’s statement that it was ending its armed campaign to end British rule in the north of Ireland, Mr Donaldson would have suffered the fate of scores of earlier “volunteers” condemned to death for spying and been shot through the back of the head, his hooded body left on a roadside.

At a press conference in Dublin, Mr Adams said that Mr Donaldson had admitted to being a paid British agent for the past 20 years. Last night Mr Donaldson said that he deeply regretted his activities, adding: “I was recruited in the 1980s after compromising myself during a vulnerable time in my life. Since then I have worked for British intelligence and the RUC/PSNI Special Branch.”

According to Mr Adams, Mr Donaldson had approached Declan Kerney, the party’s Northern chairman, after being warned by police that he was going to be exposed and that his life was in danger. At a subsequent meeting with Mr Kerney and Leo Green, another Sinn Fein official, he admitted to being a British agent and was expelled from the party.

Asked if he suspected that there had been an informer, Mr Adams said: “I was very, very suspicious and some of us were very suspicious when the events of 2002 unfolded, when we saw this hugely orchestrated operation at Stormont, because we knew there was no Sinn Fein spy ring at Stormont.”

Only a week ago Mr Adams appeared shoulder to shoulder with Mr Donaldson outside Stormont after the spying charges were dropped by the Director of Public Prosecutions “in the public interest”. The case was heard at an unlisted hearing at Belfast Crown Court as the Queen and Prince Philip made a visit to the city, prompting charges that the timing was not coincidental. Unionists have demanded that the “public interest” in dropping the charges be explained.

It is likely that yesterday’s developments may go some way to explaining what seemed, even by Northern Ireland’s standards, a murky decision.

Mr Adams sought to divert attention from the news that his movement was penetrated at the highest level by blaming “securocrats” and the British Government for “political policing” that damaged the institutions of the Good Friday Agreement. “The fact is that the collapse of the political institutions was a direct result of the actions of some of those who run the intelligence and policing system of the British,” he said. “The fact is that the key person at the centre of those events was a Sinn Fein member who was a British agent. This is entirely the responsibility of the British Government.

“If Britain’s war is over then the British Prime Minister needs to come to terms with the fact that he has to end the activities of the securocrats.”

A Police Service of Northern Ireland spokesman said: “Police do not confirm or deny whether an individual is or was an informant.”

Unionists were astonished by the expulsion. The Democratic Unionist MP Jeffrey Donaldson said: “This has certainly given an added twist to the entire Stormontgate scandal and confirms our view that the reasons the court decided not to prosecute was because to do so would have compromised an agent of the state and sensitive security documents. It raises the question that the decision not to proceed was politically motivated.”

William Mackessy, one of the three men cleared of the spying charges, once worked as a security guard in the offices of Sir Reg Empey, then a minister in the powersharing executive at Stormont. Sir Reg, now leader of the Ulster Unionist Party, said that he would be seeking an urgent meeting with government officials.

Sir Alasdair Fraser, Northern Ireland’s Director of Public Prosecutions, declined to comment. But Sir Reg said: “If this was the person who was being protected by the DPP, then there is no reason why these prosecutions cannot proceed. It actually debunks the claims by Sinn Fein there was no spy ring operating inside Stormont, when in fact there was.”

Brooding silence as unopened cards fill letterbox at no 16

Belfast Telegraph

By Linda McKee
newsdesk@belfasttelegraph.co.uk
17 December 2005

NEIGHBOURS of Denis Donaldson were arriving home with their Christmas shopping as the TV cameras descended on Aitnamona Crescent, seeking Donaldson’s reaction to his shock expulsion from Sinn Fein.

Seasonal lights glimmered in windows all along the peaceful residential west Belfast street yesterday evening, but number 16 lay dark and silent.

With Donaldson facing a future away from Belfast after admitting being a British spy for 20 years, the blinds were drawn at his deserted house in a quiet street off the Monagh Bypass.

Last night, the mailbox at the side of the terraced house was stuffed with unopened Christmas cards.

Although a silver Volkswagen Golf car and trailer waited in the paved area outside the front door of the home of Sinn Fein’s former head of administration at Stormont, neighbours said there had been little sign of life for the past few days.

Some were reluctant to comment at all on the neighbour who had been at the centre of the Stormontgate crisis - the political controversy that brought down the Northern Ireland Assembly.

One described him as being a quiet older man who wore glasses.

Another, referring to Donaldson and his wife Alice, said: “They kept themselves to themselves.

“I haven’t seen them for a week or so.”

Other locals were at keen to stress that outsiders were not welcome in their street, which lies in the republican heartland.

One neighbour was terse, saying: “I keep myself to myself and he keeps himself to himself.”

A former close associate commented: “I presume now he will have to blow - how could you look people in the eye after this?

“It is his wife Alice and his daughter I feel sorry for.”

As the first evening newscasts came, curious residents at Aitnamona were gathering at their doors to watch the unfolding drama outside as the flashes went off and the TV cameras began to roll.

Indirect quote of the day

BreakingNews.ie

Sinn Féin’s Martin McGuinness has insisted the only spy ring which operated out of Stormont was operated by British Intelligence Services.

**It begins to look like ‘British Intelligence’ and ‘Sinn Féin’ are synonymous…

A shiner for the Shinners

Belfast Telegraph

Are republicans feeling twitchy as another spy is uncovered? asks laurence white

By Laurence White
newsdesk@belfasttelegraph.co.uk
17 December 2005

NORTHERN Ireland’s ‘dirty war’ has taken yet another bizarre, even surreal, twist.

Denis Donaldson, the self-confessed British agent, was one of Sinn Fein’s top ‘cold warriors’ - this will spook republicans.

Just over a week ago, Mr Donaldson was one of three men facing charges of spying for Sinn Fein inside Stormont buildings.

It was his arrest in October 2002 and the arrest of two other men, one his son-in-law, the other a porter at Stormont, which effectively brought down the power-sharing Assembly and has left the province in political limbo for around three years.

The charges were dropped nine days ago after the prosecution service said it would not be in the public interest to proceed.

Well the public is well and truly interested now.

Political opponents of Sinn Fein will be rubbing their hands with glee as another alleged ‘traitor for old Ireland’ is unmasked.

Following on from the outing of the agent code-named Stakeknife who was the head of the IRA’s security division, a second very senior member of the republican movement has been uncovered working for the British intelligence services.

Both are west Belfast men and both would have been seen as close to the northern leadership of the movement.

That is something which is bound to unnerve even the poker-faced Gerry Adams.

Just what will other senior republicans in places like west Tyrone, south Armagh, Kerry or Dublin be thinking?

Adams, Martin McGuinness and their northern colleagues carefully worked their way to the top of the republican movement and just as carefully sidelined others who did not share their vision of the way ahead.

What must those who favoured the bullet over the ballot box think of the leadership now?

In the bad old days of the Troubles those caught, or even suspected of, working for the police or Army were treated without mercy even though most were low-level operatives who had been turned because of some personal weakness.

But Stakeknife and Donaldson were of a different order. They had much more influence and knowledge. Indeed now many republicans will be asking just how much influence did they exert.

Even more chillingly, at least to republicans, many will be wondering if there are more agents in influential positions in the republican movement.

Donaldson said yesterday he had been working as an agent since the 1980s, so it is hardly stretching the imagination to think that others have been equally busy.

This all would be fascinating enough if it was just a simple Brits v Shinners dirty war. But it isn’t.

We all have been caught up in the fall-out. We don’t have an Assembly even though we keep electing more than 100 members to it. We don’t have a say in how this province is run, even though we have more elected politicians than we need.

Instead we have a group of imposed Direct Rule ministers who are railroading through water charges, huge rate rises, sweeping education, health and political reforms without any fear or hindrance.

We are paying double because of this dirty war - paying for politicians who are doing nothing and (soon) paying through the noses for water which falls in such copious from our skies that it continually floods our homes.

And, ultimately, there is the highest price of all - we have lost all confidence in the political process.

All of those involved in dirty wars end up being soiled and most people don’t want to share in that contamination.

Denis Donaldson admits spying but says ‘Stormontgate’ a fiction

Irish Independent

06:06 Saturday December 17th 2005

The so called Stormontgate affair has been described as nothing more than a fiction and a scam created by the special branch

Those are the claims of a top republican who last night confirmed that he was a British agent

Denis Donaldson who served as Sinn Fein’s Head of Administration at Stormont was expelled from its ranks on Thursday

He’s confirmed that he was recruited in the 1980’s at a particularly vulnerable time in his life and was paid for his covert services

Gerry Adams revealed that Mr Donaldson was approached by police officers earlier in the week and told he was about to be “outed” as an informer

Speaking in Dublin last night, Mr Adams said he would be utterly amazed if Tony Blair was aware of the activities

DONALDSON STATEMENT IN FULL:

This is the full statement by the former Sinn Fein head of administration at
Stormont, Denis Donaldson:

“My name is Denis Donaldson. I worked as a Sinn Fein Assembly group administrator in Parliament Buildings at the time of the PSNI raid on the Sinn Fein offices in October 2002 - the so-called Stormontgate affair. I was a British agent at the time. I was recruited in the 1980s after compromising myself during a vulnerable time in my life.

“Since then I have worked for British intelligence and the RUC/PSNI Special Branch. Over that period I was paid money.

“My last two contacts with Special Branch were as follows - two days before my arrest in October 2002 and last night, when a member of the special branch contacted me to arrange a meeting.

“I was not involved in any republican spy ring in Stormont. The so-called Stormontgate affair was a scam and a fiction, it never existed, it was created by Special Branch.

“I deeply regret my activities with British intelligence and RUC/PSNI Special Branch. I apologise to anyone who has suffered as a result of my activities as well as to my former comrades and especially to my family who have become victims in all of this.'’

Mystery of Sinn Féin man who spied for British

Guardian

· Party expels member who was agent for 20 years
· New pressure on Blair to make statement

Angelique Chrisafis, Ireland correspondent
Saturday December 17, 2005
The Guardian

A top Sinn Féin member who headed the party’s Stormont offices last night confessed that he had been spying for the British for 20 years. Denis Donaldson, a 55-year-old former head of administration at Stormont, said he was recruited in the 1980s as a paid agent and deeply regretted working for British intelligence.

His admission, which prompted his expulsion from the party, is the latest twist in a three-year saga dubbed “Stormontgate” in which allegations of an IRA spy ring in Northern Ireland’s parliament led to the suspension of the assembly in 2002 and three years of direct rule.

Nationalist and unionist politicians last night demanded that Tony Blair make a statement shedding some light on what appeared to be an increasingly murky affair. The Irish prime minister, Bertie Ahern, described Mr Donaldson’s confession as “as bizarre as it gets”.

Mr Donaldson was working as a Sinn Féin administrator in Parliament Buildings when police raided his party’s offices in October 2002. Officers investigating an alleged IRA spy ring seized computer disks in what would become one of the highest profile spying cases in Northern Ireland. The government swiftly suspended the assembly after unionists threatened to resign.

Mr Donaldson and his son-in-law, Ciaran Kearney, a community worker, were arrested and charged with having documents likely to be of use to terrorists. A civil servant, William Mackessy, was charged with collecting information on the security forces. Hundreds of prison officers whose names were believed to have fallen into IRA hands were warned about threats to their safety. But last week the case against the three men was suddenly dropped in an unscheduled Belfast court hearing.

The court was told simply that the director of proscutions felt going ahead was “no longer in the public interest”. Mr Donaldson said last night in a statement to Irish state broadcaster RTE recorded in a Dublin hotel room: “I was a British agent at the time. I was recruited in the 1980s after compromising myself during a vulnerable time in my life. Since then I have worked for British intelligence and the RUC/PSNI Special Branch. Over that period I was paid money. I was not involved in any republican spy ring in Stormont. The so-called Stormontgate affair was a scam and a fiction. It never existed; it was created by Special Branch.”

His confession will increase demands for Mr Blair to shed light on the case and explain why charges against Mr Donaldson were dropped with no explanation. Unionists believed the IRA had been gathering intelligence and demanded to know if the government had forced the case to be dropped to spare Sinn Féin’s blushes.

Mr Donaldson, who was once photographed with hunger striker Bobby Sands, appeared last week alongside Sinn Féin’s Gerry Adams outside Stormont, jubilant that his name had been cleared. The party then accused politically motivated “securocrats” of orchestrating a baseless case to bring down the power-sharing government at Stormont and Mr Donaldson said he was considering suing the police.

When Mr Adams announced yesterday that Mr Donaldson had confessed he was a British agent, even those who knew him were stunned. Mr Adams said Mr Donaldson had been warned by police this week that he was going to be outed as a spy and his life was in danger. This prompted him to confess his double life to senior party officials. He deeply regretted working for British intelligence and apologised to his “former comrades” and to his family.

Not since Freddie Scappaticci - “Stakeknife”, a former member of the IRA’s internal security unit - was alleged in 2003 to have been the highest ranking British agent working inside the Provos, have the republicans faced such an uproar over alleged informers.

The Northern Ireland Office refused to comment on the claim that Mr Donaldson was a spy, but said the 2002 Stormont raids were conducted for no other reason than to “prevent paramilitary intelligence gathering”. But the the moderate nationalist SDLP said there was a “distinct possibility” Mr Donaldson was being used as a scapegoat to cover someone else. Alasdair McDonnell, an SDLP MP, said: “It is time for Sinn Féin to stop trying to cover up. Now that the truth is coming out, we hope they will also face up to the truth of the Stakeknife affair and admit who knew what and when.”

The spying game

Denis Donaldson is the new face in the IRA’s rogues’ gallery of alleged touts working for the British security services. Normally informants are interrogated, hooded and shot, though some have survived in hiding. There have been scores over the years, including:

Eamon Collins
He was battered to death in his hometown of Newry in 1999. He had renounced violence, turned informer and written an explosive book, Killing Rage, that revealed the organisation’s violence.

Freddie Scappaticci
Said to be a former senior member of the IRA’s internal security unit, Scappaticci, codenamed Stakeknife, was alleged to be the highest ranking British agent working inside the Provos. He quit his west Belfast home following newspaper allegations in May 2003. He gave a press conference after the allegations were made to deny the claims but has since vanished from public view.

Robert Lean
Twenty years ago Lean, one of the IRA’s top men, turned Special Branch informant. Police believed his evidence would be enough to bring down the Provisionals. He revealed dozens of names before he was moved into Palace Barracks near Belfast. But his conscience got the better of him and he escaped and confessed to his former associates. They immediately ordered him to leave the city. He has not been heard or seen since.

Gregory Burns, John Dignam, Aidan Starrs
The IRA murdered all three and dumped their bodies in 1992. It was claimed they were police and MI5 informers who had been tried and executed by the organisation.

Scappaticci/Stakeknife

cryptome.org

Scappaticci/Stakeknife Court Papers

Go >>here

Related:

stakeknife-loss

fru-stakeknife

Today in history: Harrods bomb blast kills six

BBC ON THIS DAY

17 December 1983

Three police officers and three members of the public have been killed and 75 others injured after a car bomb attack in central London.

Police believe the IRA planted the bomb in a side street near Harrods department store in Knightsbridge.

A coded warning was received at 1245 GMT but the device exploded just before 1330 when it is believed to have killed four police officers who were approaching it.

A huge blast ripped through the busy streets which were crowded with Christmas shoppers.

It sent out thick black smoke, rubble and smashed glass.

Many walking wounded were treated at the scene while those suffering more serious injuries were taken to nearby hospitals by ambulance and army vehicles.

Four hospitals were put on emergency alert to expect serious casualties.

Staff at the Harrods store reported seeing windows blown out into the shop and seeing colleagues and shoppers badly injured.

Second warning

Police worked to evacuate the area fearful other explosives might have been planted in surrounding shops and streets.

They evacuated stores and flats but had to repeat appeals to the public to empty the streets as chaos gripped the area.

Officers cordoned off the buildings affected and began a detailed search for evidence from today’s explosion and to ensure there were no further devices.

A second warning call was made to authorities at the time of the first explosion claiming a bomb had been placed in the heart of Oxford Street.

It was said to be at the C&A store on the east side of the shopping street.

Police tried to clear the area crowded with shoppers and cordoned it off but it was later found to be a false alarm.

Today’s events come after a series of threats from the IRA in recent days that it was planning a pre-Christmas bombing campaign in the capital.

In Context

In fact, 90 people were injured in the blast which took place on one of the busiest shopping days of the year.

The following day the IRA admitted planting the car bomb and said it had given a clear warning about the explosion.

But Scotland Yard denounced the organisation and stepped up security in the city.

Hundreds of extra police and mobile bomb squads were drafted into London to protect the public from any further attacks.

Harrods re-opened three days later despite the damage.

Its owners said the store would not be defeated by acts of terrorism.






















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