SAOIRSE32

3/4/2008

IRA man given life in prison

A former IRA man has been sentenced to life in prison at the Central Criminal Court in Dublin.


The sentencing took place at the Central Criminal Court in Dublin.

Robert Duffy, originally from Belfast, was released under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement seven years ago.

He pleaded guilty to the attempted murder of Colin O’Neill at the Emerald Bar in Dundalk in March 2007.

The court heard that Duffy, who had had a row with Mr O’Neill, put a shotgun to his face and fired once, before shooting him again in the back.

He was sentenced to life in prison for attempted murder.

In 1996 Duffy was given a life sentence in Northern Ireland for the murder of John Gibson in 1993.

He worked for a construction firm hired by the Royal Ulster Constabulary.

Duffy served four years before being released under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.

Anti-sectarianism cash allocated

BBC
1 April 2008

The first grants from a new Irish government anti-sectarianism fund have been allocated.

Seven of the eight grants, which total 390,000 euros, were given to groups involved in cross-community work in NI.

Minister of Foreign Affairs Dermot Ahern said the grants would help tackle the scourge of sectarianism.

“Whether through education, dialogue or the exploration of culture, we can promote tolerance and acceptance of our cultural diversity,” he said.

“And by breaking down religious, social and cultural barriers, we can extend our knowledge and understanding of each other’s cultures, beliefs and traditions.

“I would encourage groups and individuals with proposals in this area to apply to my Department for funding under this scheme. Together we can hasten an end to sectarianism in our society.”

The groups being allocated the awards are:

* 174 Trust, Belfast, 40,000 euros - a non-denominational community development organisation using former Presbyterian Church buildings as a shared space for engagement between the two main traditions in north Belfast.

* Clonard Monastery Youth Centre, Belfast, 15,000 euros - the centre has a programme of activities for people aged 10-20, including those from loyalist areas of north Belfast.

* Football Association of Ireland, Dublin, 25,000 euros - towards the costs of an anti-sectarianism programme

* Holy Family Youth Centre, Belfast, 25,000 euros - towards a joint project between Holy Family Youth Centre and First Step Drop-in on York Road, to engage young people who live on the interface.

* Integrated Education Fund, Belfast, 150,000 euros

* Saint’s Youth Centre, Belfast, 20,000 euros - towards the delivery of cross-community contact programme with young people from Ballybeen, Dundonald.

* VOICE Highfield Reconciliation Project, Belfast, 40,000 euros - the group’s aims include victim support, interface management, and cross-community and cross border community relations.

* Youthcom, Belfast, 75,000 euros - towards a three-year cross-community youth intervention project involving eight loyalist youth groups and nationalist youth centres.

Irish Republican Information Service (no. 143)

Teach Dáithí Ó Conaill, 223 Parnell Street, Dublin 1, Ireland
Phone: +353-1-872 9747; FAX: +353-1-872 9757; e-mail: saoirse@iol.ie
Date: 2 Aibreán / April 2008

Internet resources maintained by SAOIRSE-Irish Freedom

http://saoirse.info

In this issue:

1. Harassment in Armagh and Keady
2. Loyalist attack leaves man critically injured
3. Details of a three-page UDA speech are revealed
4. Brit military killings reopened
5. Son of loyalist victim deported from US
6. UVF banner on parade
7. Sr Stan calls for immigration Bill change
8. Memorial to Limerick IRA man restored
9. Teachers oppose British army recruitment
10. Salmond calls for referendum on Scottish independence

1. HARASSMENT IN ARMAGH AND KEADY

IN the weeks before the British queen’s visit to Armagh City, the British colonial police stepped up it’s harassment of Republican Sinn Féin members in the Armagh and Keady areas.

On a number of occasions Republican Sinn Féin members have been stopped, while driving their own cars, under the British Prevention Terrorism Act, three to four times on the same night by the same PSNI/RUC men.

Other members of RSF have been stopped while walking out of there homes and searched again under the PTA. The Vice-Chairperson of the Cumann in Armagh was stopped on his way to work in his own car, which was searched. They followed him to his place of work, waited on him to leave and stopped him again in his work van, searched it and on both occasions nothing was found.

On another occasion another RSF member and the Chairperson of the Armagh Cumann had just got into their car outside the members’ house, when they were stopped under the PTA. They searched the car and again nothing found after a half hour. They were allowed to drive on, but the PSNI/RUC car would not start and they had to wait on a Land Rover to tow them out of the estate while coming under attack from young Republicans from the Estate.

The PSNI/RUC personnel have a lot of time on there hands, they drive past RSF members’ houses every 20 minutes and at one time the Chairperson of the Keady Cumann had five PSNI/RUC cars parked outside his house for 20 minutes, as they tried to intimidated this man’s family.

Republican Sinn Féin in Keady and Armagh condemn the ongoing harassment of our members will not allow it to stop us from rebuilding the true Republican Movement in Armagh and Keady.

2. LOYALIST ATTACK LEAVES MAN CRITICALLY INJURED
A FAN of Glasgow Celtic soccer club was seriously ill in hospital on March 29 after his throat was slashed during a mass loyalist attack on a pub in central Belfast. The supporter was set upon by a mob of up to 70 Linfield fans returning from the Irish Cup semi-final clash with Cliftonville at The Oval.
Eyewitnesses in the mainly nationalist Castle Street said that at around 3.30pm the Linfield supporters alighted from a bus and rushed towards the area.

At first the mob tried to get into the Belfast Bar at the junction of Castle Street and King Street, but were repelled by up to 100 customers who had been watching the Celtic-Rangers Old Firm match on television.

“It was after the Linfield crowd were beaten back from the bar that they singled out a guy in King Street,” said one witness. “They knew he was Catholic (sic) because of his Celtic shirt.”

The RUC/PSNI were informed by city centre bar staff 20 minutes to half an hour before the sectarian attacks that a 30-strong gang of men looked like ‘trouble’.

According to an eyewitness in the city centre bar the gang, which may have links to Neo Nazi group Combat 18, were on the look-out for Cliftonville supporters well before the Irish Cup football clash ended in Linfield’s favour.

“These guys walked in about 1.45pm,” the eyewitness told a Belfast newspaper. “There were about 30 of them, and they were all sober and well-dressed. They were overheard talking about nabbing Cliftonville supporters and giving them a hard time. They left the bar about 3pm and went outside and got photographed holding up a huge Union Jack flag which had ‘No Surrender’ written on it.

“After that, they walked towards the city centre. That’s when bar staff phoned the police to say there’s going to be trouble from this lot.”

The gang then launched a vicious attack on nationalists in and around Cosgrove’s bar in King Street. The most seriously injured during the gang’s rampage half an hour later was Scotsman Hugh ‘Shuggie’ McAnally (32) who had his throat slashed in the vicious onslaught. (more…)

Shoukri trial judge steps down

BBC
1 April 2008

A judge has stepped down from a terrorist trial involving six alleged loyalist paramilitary supporters.


Ihab Shoukri allegedly wrote the speech

Mr Justice Gillen aborted the case and ordered a retrial at Belfast Crown Court.

He said case papers given to him contained certain details “which may be adverse” to some of the accused.

High profile loyalist Ihab Shoukri faces charges of UDA membership, including assisting, arranging, or managing a meeting of the terror group.

At Tuesday’s hearing, Mr Justice Gillen said he was stepping down “in the interests of justice”. He ordered the retrial to begin on Monday.

He said he had not read any of the material in question, but decided “the interests of justice require me to recuse myself”, and therefore he could not hear any further evidence in the case.

Mr Justice Gillen added that justice should not only be done in a case, but also be seen to be done.

The six men on trial were arrested in what the prosecution claim was a dress rehearsal for a UDA show of strength at the Alexander Bar on Belfast’s York Street, when it was stormed by police in March 2006.

A speech to have been allegedly given in the bar pledged it would never disband.

The speech, allegedly in the handwriting of 34-year-old Mr Shoukri, declared while the UDA “must now take our fight into the political arena - it’s not the end of the UDA which is here to stay”.

It was found in the pocket of one of five men arrested alongside Mr Shoukri, from Westland Drive in the north of the city.

Death of Enniskillen bomb widow

BBC
1 April 2008

The widow of a man who died after being in a coma as a result of the Enniskillen bombing has died.


Noreen Hill wanted an end to all arms in society

Noreen Hill nursed her husband Ronnie for 13 years.

The former headmaster of Enniskillen High School never regained consciousness after the explosion at the cenotaph in 1987.

Mrs Hill bought a nursing home in Holywood, County Down, to care for him until his death in 2000.

In 2001, Mrs Hill called for an end to so-called punishment beatings and shootings.

Speaking on BBC Northern Ireland’s Sunday Sequence, she said weapons were an “evil” influence on life in Northern Ireland.

“I would like to see arms and such out of the community. I would like to see the beatings and shootings all stopped,” said Mrs Hill.

“I should hope that my children won’t ever get beaten up or kneecapped, but it is happening here in Northern Ireland.”

Mr Hill was the 12th person to die as a result of injuries sustained in the blast in which 63 people were also injured.

Family stress over inquiry delay

BBC
3 April 2008

A brother of a man killed on Bloody Sunday has said the delay in publishing the findings of the Saville Inquiry had added to the families’ stress.


Soldiers shot 13 people dead in Derry on Bloody Sunday

Thursday marks the 10th anniversary of the opening of the inquiry, set up to re-examine the events of that day.

Fourteen people died after British soldiers opened fire on a civil rights march in Derry in January 1972.

Liam Wray, whose brother, Jim, was killed said he did not expect the inquiry to take so long.

“Ten years is a long time,” he said.

“In saying that, the search for truth has been going on a lot longer than that, so we are prepared to wait.

“But it does create a lot of stress and a lot of anxiety obviously the longer the process drags out.”


Lord Saville has been presiding over the inquiry

The Bloody Sunday inquiry was established in 1998 by Prime Minister Tony Blair after a campaign by families of those killed and injured.

Lord Saville of Newdigate and the Commonwealth judges accompanying him on the inquiry began hearing evidence in March 2000.

It heard evidence from from than 900 witnesses including leading politicians, including the prime minister at the time, Sir Edward Heath, civilians, policemen, soldiers and IRA members.

The inquiry has cost about £150m.

Its findings were due to be published almost three years ago.

Three held in dissident republican probe

rte.ie
Wednesday, 2 April 2008 18:29

Three men have been arrested as part of an investigation into dissident republican operations in Donegal.

The men were detained last night and can be held for up to 72 hours before having to be charged or released.

The three are being questioned at garda stations in Co Donegal.

Shoukri trial aborted

:::u.tv:::pt=n&id=88361
Tuesday, 1 April 2008

The Belfast trial of six suspected UDA supporters, including well-known loyalist Ihab Shoukri, was dramatically aborted at the Crown Court this afternoon and a retrial ordered.

Mr Justice Gillen, who ordered the retrial to begin on Monday, said he was stepping down “in the interests of justice”.

Evidence in the non-jury Diplock case had continued this morning, but following a lengthened luncheon the trial failed to restart at the appointed time.

When eventually the case did resume, Mr Justice Gillen announced that it had been brought to his attention that the case papers given to him contained certain details “which may be adverse” to some of the accused.

However, while he pointed out that he had not read any of the material, he had decided “the interests of justice require me to excuse myself”, and therefore he could not hear any further evidence in the case.

Today the trial, at which trouble flared moments before it began yesterday, had been hearing evidence of the arrest of the six men.

The prosecution claims the men were attending a dress rehearsal for a UDA show of strength at the Alexandra Bar on Belfast`s York Street, when it was stormed by police on March 2 2006.

Shoukri faces charges of UDA membership, professing to be a member and supporting the UDA “by assisting in arranging or managing a meeting” of the terror group.

Gary McKenzie, along with 39-year-old Samuel Todd Robinson of Arosa Crescent, Belfast, are accused of UDA membership and supporting the organisation.

A fourth man, 40-year-old George McHenry of Ardoyne Road, Belfast, is also accused of UDA membership and of professing to be a member.

The remaining two accused, 50-year-old Alexandra Bar owner John Davis of Glebe Manor Glengormley, and 21-year-old Alan John McClean of Westland Drive, Belfast, both face charges of supporting the UDA.

All six men deny the charges against them.

Cops warned about loyalist gang before Belfast bar attack

Belfast Media
Andersonstown News Monday
Aine McEntee

The Andersonstown News has learned the PSNI were informed by city centre bar staff 20 minutes to half an hour before sectarian carnage erupted outside Cosgrove’s on Saturday that a 30-strong gang of men looked like ‘trouble’.

According to an eyewitness in the city centre bar the gang, which may have links to Neo Nazi group Combat 18, were on the look-out for Cliftonville supporters well before the Irish Cup football clash ended in Linfield’s favour.
“These guys walked in about 1.45pm,” the eyewitness told the Andersonstown News.
“There was about 30 of them, and they were all sober and well-dressed.
“They were overheard talking about nabbing Cliftonville supporters and giving them a hard time.
“They left the bar about 3pm and went outside and got photographed holding up a huge Union Jack flag which had ‘No Surrender’ written on it.
“After that, they walked towards the city centre.
“That’s when bar staff phoned the police to say there’s going to be trouble from this lot.”
The gang then launched a vicious attack on Catholics in and around Cosgrove’s bar in King Street.
The most seriously injured during the gang’s rampage half an hour later was Scotsman Hugh ‘Shuggie’ McAnally.
It’s understood the 32-year-old had his throat slashed in the vicious onslaught.
At the time of going to press, he is still in a critical condition in the Royal Victoria Hospital.
A popular and well-liked man, Hugh has lived in various parts of North Belfast over the past few years including Ligoniel, Cliftonville Road and the Whitewell area.
This paper understands that he had worked as a caretaker for Hazelwood Integrated College and is currently working in the same role for Belfast Metropolitan College’s Brunswick Street campus.
A spokesman for PSNI confirmed officers received information about “a number of people at around 3.20pm” on Saturday.
“Officers were monitoring the situation via CCTV and responsibly reacted both promptly and appropriately to events as they unfolded,” he said.
He added that the ongoing investigation was probing the Combat 18 links.
“Police are investigating a number of lines of enquiry,” he said.
West Belfast MLA Fra McCann said his colleague Tom Hartley chair of West Belfast District Policing Partnership will be asking hard-hitting questions of police officers.
“A number of questions need to be answered by the police in terms of operations and their response,” Fra McCann said.
“It appears at this stage, that had action been taken sooner this awful demonstration of hate and pure sectarianism might not have taken place.
“These guys were determined to inflict a lot of damage, they broke noses with their fists yelling ‘Fenian Bastards’ at them.”

I know two provos were RUC informers

Sunday Life
Sunday, March 30, 2008
By Kathy Johnston

Former police agent calls for investigation into IRA pair

Former Special Branch agent Martin McGartland believes that two members of the IRA’s internal security unit were recruited as police informers after being secretly observed as they abducted him in August 1991.

Jim ‘Boot’ McCarthy and Paul ‘Chico’ Hamilton angrily denied being RUC informers last week after the PSNI contacted both men to warn them that they were about to be outed.

McGartland, who was forced to leave Northern Ireland after being unmasked as a police agent, said yesterday: “I believe that McCarthy and Hamilton were recruited as informers.

“I have no problem with that and, in fact, I would congratulate them. But I want to know why they were never prosecuted.

“They were caught on film and I wanted to give evidence against them in court. Indeed, I would give it today.”

He added: “I have already lodged a complaint with the PSNI and I am writing to Al Hutchinson, the Police Ombudsman, to ask him to investigate.”

Hamilton was nicknamed ‘Budgie’ after he ’sang’ to the RUC when they arrested him in 1977 for the attempted murder of a major in the Gordon Highlanders.

He was later sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment.

McCarthy (51), now the West Belfast co-ordinator for Community Restorative Justice (CRJ), is known as ‘Boot’ after he ’squeaky booted’ - the term given to conforming IRA prisoners who wore prison uniform and refused to join the blanket protest.

McCarthy, who was a prison orderly, received an IRA punishment shooting for taking the side of the authorities when he was released from prison. He received a five-year sentence in 1976 for possession of firearms.

McCarthy was the subject of a BBC Radio 4 programme last week where he was broadcast discussing the details of crime in west Belfast with a PSNI officer.

A photograph of him posing beside a mural of dead hunger striker Bobby Sands appeared on the BBC website.

Like Roy McShane, who was moved from Northern Ireland by the security services after being unmasked as a police informer, McCarthy was once a driver for senior Sinn Fein personnel including Gerry Adams, while 52-year-old Hamilton acted as bodyguard for Adams for eight years.

McGartland’s case will be raised at the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee in Westminster on Wednesday by former senior RUC officer Raymond White.

White, who is chairman of the Retired Police Officers Association, was a uniformed commander at the time of McGartland’s abduction, but later went on to become head of Special Branch.

White said yesterday: “I will be raising Martin McGartland’s case along with that of other police informers at Westminster on Wednesday.

“These are very, very brave individuals and the long-term implications for them are grave.

“Their security must continue to be protected and other services such as counselling and vocational training provided.”

McGartland’s claims that the abduction was under covert surveillance by the RUC were corroborated by Detective Superintendent Ian Phoenix, who was in charge of the operation and who later died in the Chinook helicopter crash in June 1994.

In Phoenix, Policing the Shadows, a book compiled from his diaries and serialised in Sunday Life, Phoenix confirmed McGartland’s account.

After observing McGartland being taken from Connolly House, the IRA team slipped the net at traffic lights.

The Police Service refused to comment on McGartland’s complaint yesterday.

A spokesperson for Al Hutchinson said: “We have received a complaint that police provided false information when they advised a member of the public that he was due to be exposed as an informer and may be under threat.

“We are now making further inquiries in relation to that complaint.”

Sinn Fein, meanwhile, issued a statement saying that the party “was happy to let Jim know that there was no evidence that he was to be outed as an informer”.

Ireland’s Prime Minister to Step Down Amid Official Probe of Personal Finances

By Kevin Sullivan and Mary Jordan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Thursday, April 3, 2008; A12

LONDON, April 2 — Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern, who helped bring peace to Northern Ireland but was dogged by investigations into his personal finances, said Wednesday that he would resign next month after almost 11 years in office [Video onsite].

Ahern, 56, announced his resignation at a Dublin news conference as a government tribunal continues to investigate whether he received improper cash payments from businessmen in the mid-1990s.

In a sometimes emotional 11-minute address, Ahern denied wrongdoing. But he said the “incessant” focus on his finances had been a drain on his administration, adding that the government must “not be constantly deflected by the minutiae of my life, my lifestyle and my finances.”

“I have never received a corrupt payment, and I’ve never done anything to dishonor any office I have held,” Ahern said. “I know in my heart of hearts I’ve done no wrong and wronged no one.”

The second-longest-serving prime minister in Irish history, Ahern took office in June 1997 during a period of breathtaking economic growth in Ireland.

With his boxer’s build and gregarious personality, he built his political career on being a popular and plainspoken “man of the people.”

“He has an affectionate following among the voters, who put him in office three times,” said Irish author and historian Tim Pat Coogan. Ahern remained popular, Coogan noted, despite growing pressure from opposition politicians and members of his own coalition government.

Beyond cultivating his modest Everyman image, Ahern has proved a shrewd political operator. He was often called the “Teflon taoiseach,” the Gaelic word for prime minister.

Under his watch, Ireland built hundreds of thousands of new homes and businesses and became awash with millionaires and even billionaires as the “Celtic Tiger” economy boomed. By 2006, the nation’s population had topped 4 million for the first time since the mid-19th century. Immigrants from Eastern Europe, Africa and China have been drawn to the flourishing economy, and many Irish who had left their once-impoverished land returned.

Working closely with Tony Blair, then Britain’s prime minister, Ahern brought Northern Ireland’s Catholic and Protestant leaders together to sign the landmark 1998 Good Friday peace agreement.

“The priority I put above all others was to work for peace on this island, and I have given all to that cause,” Ahern said Wednesday as he announced his intention to step down May 6. He was flanked by top aides from his party, Fianna Fail.

“He will have, deservedly, a central place in his nation’s political history and much more widely” as well, Blair said Wednesday, calling Ahern “a remarkable man with a remarkable record of achievement.”

Blair’s successor as Britain’s prime minister, Gordon Brown, praised Ahern for “transforming Ireland’s relationship with the U.K., and playing a key role in the development of a forward-looking and dynamic Europe.”

Former Irish prime minister Garret FitzGerald, from the opposition Fine Gael party, said in an interview that despite Ahern’s “financial problems,” the outgoing leader has “extraordinary negotiating skills” and has handled Northern Ireland and European issues “brilliantly.”

Ahern, who will address a joint session of Congress this month in one of his last official duties, said Wednesday he was proud to be only the fourth visiting world leader to have addressed both the U.S. Congress and the British Parliament.

Ahern’s ultimate downfall follows an investigation by the Mahon Tribunal, which the Irish government established in November 1997 to look into allegations of bribes and other payments related to Ireland’s fast-paced development.

The tribunal has been investigating deposits into Ahern’s accounts totaling hundreds of thousands of dollars in the first half of the 1990s, when he was a member of Parliament but not prime minister.

Last October, Ahern acknowledged receiving cash payments from businessmen who were personal friends during the period when he was separating from his wife, Miriam. He denied that the payments were unethical.

“All of these issues arose in a period when my family, personal and professional situations were rapidly changing, and I made the best decisions I could in the circumstances in which I found myself,” Ahern said Wednesday.

Still, Ahern has never provided a full accounting of several cash deposits. And his case was not helped last week when a former secretary testified that in 1994 she had deposited about 15,000 British pounds, then worth about $23,000, into Ahern’s bank account, which Ahern had previously denied.

“This dates back to an era of looser accounting of political and private donations,” said Coogan, the historian. “It wasn’t Tony Soprano walking into his office. This is the past catching up with a good man.” Coogan said the long-running inquiry and the unanswered questions amounted to “death by a thousand cuts” for the prime minister.

The tribunal’s work is expected to go on for months, and analysts said it is increasingly clear that it will produce a report critical of Ahern.

Michael Gallagher, a professor of political science at Trinity College Dublin, said the resignation “was a surprise to everyone, but there was growing speculation his position was growing untenable.”

“Bertie lives in an ordinary suburban house and goes to the local pub, and he was never seen as someone who was making much money in politics,” Gallagher said. “He will be remembered well, as a modest and direct person who seemed to live the same lifestyle as most people. But nonetheless, there was something odd about his finances.”






















Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome | Theme designs available here