SAOIRSE32

27/1/2009

20 years later, the fight for truth and justice continues

Belfast Media

The son of murdered solicitor Pat Finucane says he is proud that his father’s memory and legacy will be honoured at a major conference in Dublin next month.

Organised to coincide with the 20th anniversary of the murder on February 12, the conference will see a gathering of the top legal minds in the country.

The Pat Finucane Centre, in conjunction with British Irish Rights Watch, are organising the event which will feature speakers such as Judge Peter Cory – who recommended an international inquiry into the murder of Pat Finucane – and Dato Param Cumaraswamy, who first raised concerns over Special Branch harassment of Rosemary Nelson. A close family friend of the Finucanes and High Court Judge, Seamus Treacey, is also scheduled to speak.

After the inauguration of Barack Obama as President of the United States, John said he hoped the new American administration would bring more pressure to bear on the British government on releasing the truth behind his father’s murder.

“I appreciate there are lots of major issues going on in the world, but my father’s murder isn’t going away. With the instalment of Barack Obama we would hope his position would bear fruit for our campaign.

“He made a statement last October about supporting a truth recovery process and made specific reference to the Pat Finucane case and it is encouraging to know that he would support an international inquiry into my dad’s murder.”

In response to a series of questions posed by the Irish American Unity Conference, Mr Obama said there should be an independent, public inquiry, as Judge Peter Cory recommended.

Since then, Hillary Clinton – America’s new Secretary of State – and Vice President Joe Biden have both gone on record to support the Finucane family’s calls for a no-strings-attached inquiry.

John, who is himself a solicitor with the Kevin Winters law firm in Belfast, said the need for the truth, free from any shackles imposed by the British government, was greater than ever.

“The fact that this conference has been organised should embarrass them. The fact that a lawyer from their courts was murdered for being effective at his job should cause them discomfort. They don’t like this issue raised in America, it’s an issue they prefer to keep domestically in Ireland but it’s too late for that; the name Pat Finucane is known all over the globe. The events organised for the weekend are all about remembering my father’s life and legacy and that is very appropriate because he cared about his work. His legacy represents the standing that the legal community needs to reach and uphold.”

Iconic American writer John Updike dead at age 76

Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist published more than 50 books in his career

Today
Jan. 27, 2009

NEW YORK (AP)- John Updike, the Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist, prolific man of letters and erudite chronicler of sex, divorce and other adventures in the postwar prime of the American empire, died Tuesday at age 76.

Updike, a resident of Beverly Farms, Mass., died of lung cancer, according to a statement from his publisher, Alfred A. Knopf.

A literary writer who frequently appeared on best-seller lists, the tall, hawk-nosed Updike wrote novels, short stories, poems, criticism, the memoir “Self-Consciousness” and even a famous essay about baseball great Ted Williams. He was prolific, even compulsive, releasing more than 50 books in a career that started in the 1950s. Updike won virtually every literary prize, including two Pulitzers, for “Rabbit Is Rich” and “Rabbit at Rest,” and two National Book Awards.

Suburban milieu

Although himself deprived of a Nobel, he did bestow it upon one of his fictional characters, Henry Bech, the womanizing, egotistical Jewish novelist who collected the literature prize in 1999.

His settings ranged from the court of “Hamlet” to postcolonial Africa, but his literary home was the American suburb. Born in 1932, Updike spoke for millions of Depression-era readers raised by “penny-pinching parents,” united by “the patriotic cohesion of World War II” and blessed by a “disproportionate share of the world’s resources,” the postwar, suburban boom of “idealistic careers and early marriages.”

He captured, and sometimes embodied, a generation’s confusion over the civil rights and women’s movements, and opposition to the Vietnam War. Updike was called a misogynist, a racist and an apologist for the establishment. On purely literary grounds, he was attacked by Norman Mailer as the kind of author appreciated by readers who knew nothing about writing.

But more often he was praised for his flowing, poetic writing style. Describing a man’s interrupted quest to make love, Updike likened it “to a small angel to which all afternoon tiny lead weights are attached.”

Spiritual issues

Nothing was too great or too small for Updike to poeticize. He might rhapsodize over the film projector’s “chuckling whir” or look to the stars and observe that “the universe is perfectly transparent: we exist as flaws in ancient glass.”

In the richest detail, his books recorded the extremes of earthly desire and spiritual zealotry, whether the comic philandering of the preacher in “A Month of Sundays” or the steady rage of the young Muslim in “Terrorist.” Raised in the Protestant community of Shillington, Pa., where the Lord’s Prayer was recited daily at school, Updike was a lifelong churchgoer influenced by his faith, but not immune to doubts.

“I remember the times when I was wrestling with these issues that I would feel crushed. I was crushed by the purely materialistic, atheistic account of the universe,” Updike told The Associated Press during a 2006 interview.

“I am very prone to accept all that the scientists tell us, the truth of it, the authority of the efforts of all the men and woman spent trying to understand more about atoms and molecules. But I can’t quite make the leap of unfaith, as it were, and say, `This is it. Carpe diem (seize the day), and tough luck.’”

He received his greatest acclaim for the “Rabbit” series, a quartet of novels published over a 30-year span that featured ex-high school basketball star Harry “Rabbit” Angstrom and his restless adjustment to adulthood and the constraints of work and family. To the very end, Harry was in motion, an innocent in his belief that any door could be opened, a believer in God even as he bedded women other than his wife.

“The tetralogy to me is the tale of a life, a life led an American citizen who shares the national passion for youth, freedom, and sex, the national openness and willingness to learn, the national habit of improvisation,” Updike would later write. “He is furthermore a Protestant, haunted by a God whose manifestations are elusive, yet all-important.”

Other notable books included “Couples,” a sexually explicit tale of suburban mating that sold millions of copies; “In the Beauty of the Lilies,” an epic of American faith and fantasy; and “Too Far to Go, which followed the courtship, marriage and divorce of the Maples, a suburban couple with parallels to Updike’s own first marriage.

Plagued from an early age by asthma, psoriasis and a stammer, he found creative outlets in drawing and writing. Updike was born in Reading, Pa., his mother a department store worker who longed to write, his father a high school teacher remembered with sadness and affection in “The Centaur,” a novel published in 1964. The author brooded over his father’s low pay and mocking students, but also wrote of a childhood of “warm and action-packed houses that accommodated the presence of a stranger, my strange ambition to be glamorous.”

Literary life

For Updike, the high life meant books, such as the volumes of P.G. Wodehouse and Robert Benchley he borrowed from the library as a child, or, as he later recalled, the “chastely severe, time-honored classics” he read in his dorm room at Harvard University, leaning back in his “wooden Harvard chair,” cigarette in hand.

While studying on full scholarship at Harvard, he headed the staff of the Harvard Lampoon and met the woman who became his first wife, Mary Entwistle Pennington, whom he married in June 1953, a year before he earned his A.B. degree summa cum laude. (Updike divorced Pennington in 1975 and was remarried two years later, to Martha Bernhard).

After graduating, he accepted a one-year fellowship to study painting at the Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Arts at Oxford University. During his stay in England, a literary idol, E.B. White, offered him a position at The New Yorker, where he served briefly as foreign books reviewer. Many of Updike’s reviews and short stories were published in The New Yorker, often edited by White’s stepson, Roger Angell.

By the end of the 1950s, Updike had published a story collection, a book of poetry and his first novel, “The Poorhouse Fair,” soon followed by the first of the Rabbit books, “Rabbit, Run.” Praise came so early and so often that New York Times critic Arthur Mizener worried that Updike’s “natural talent” was exposing him “from an early age to a great deal of head-turning praise.”

Updike learned to write about everyday life by, in part, living it. In 1957, he left New York, with its “cultural hassle” and melting pot of “agents and wisenheimers,” and settled with his first wife and four kids in Ipswich, Mass, a “rather out-of-the-way town” about 30 miles north of Boston.

“The real America seemed to me ‘out there,’ too heterogeneous and electrified by now to pose much threat of the provinciality that people used to come to New York to escape,” Updike later wrote.

“There were also practical attractions: free parking for my car, public education for my children, a beach to tan my skin on, a church to attend without seeming too strange.”

Gardai ’stunned to find millions in cash hidden inside cupboard’

Trial told of bags bulging with sterling

By Olivia Kelleher
Independent.ie
Tuesday January 27 2009

THE jury in the trial of a Cork father and son accused of laundering more than Stg£3m (€3.25m) from the Northern Bank robbery heard yesterday of how gardai found multiple holdall bags filled with bundles of sterling at the home of one of the men.

Ted Cunningham (60), of Woodbine Lodge, Farran, Co Cork, denies 20 charges of money laundering, while his son, Timothy Cunningham (33), of Church View, Farran, denies four charges of money laundering, all between December 20, 2004 and February 16, 2005.

Inspector Declan O’Sullivan said that shortly before midnight on February 16, 2005, he went to the house in Farran with six other gardai.

The door was opened by Ted Cunningham’s partner and a search warrant was presented to her.

Inspector O’Sullivan said another garda brought it to his attention that there was a cupboard in the basement with a combination lock which could not be opened.

Ted Cunningham arrived at the property at 4am on February 17, 2005 and the warrant was explained to him.

Mr Cunningham agreed to open the locked cupboard.

Inspector O’Sullivan said Mr Cunningham told him he had personal items in the cupboard. When asked what kind of personal items, he replied “money”. He told gardai he had “a couple of million sterling” in the cupboard.

Combination

The court heard Mr Cunningham could not remember the combination for the lock. However, he said he would break open the door of the cupboard. Inspector O’Sullivan stated the cupboard held five or six hold-all bags containing cash and a Dunnes Stores bag.

“I could see the bags were bulging with Northern Ireland sterling. There was a moment of shocked silence from everyone in the room. We were kind of looking at each other.”

Inspector O’Sullivan stated that Mr Cunningham immediately blurted out that the money was not from the Northern Bank robbery. He said he asked him why they would think that and Mr Cunningham replied “As soon as I saw it on the telly I knew I had the money down in the basement.”

Mr Cunningham was immediately cautioned and told of his right to remain silent.

A short time later Inspector O’Sullivan asked Ted Cunningham if he would answer some questions in an adjoining laundry room. He agreed and reportedly told gardai that the money in the bags would be his, subject to the sale of a sandpit going through.

He said there was £2.3m sterling in the bags and that he got it from a client he was dealing with in Bulgaria.

He also alleged he planned to declare the money to the Revenue.

Ted Cunningham claimed he had received a phone call the previous September/October (2004) and made arrangements to pick up the money from a man in a church yard across the road from his house.

“I took them (the bags) out of the four wheel drive car and brought it down here where you found them.”

The trial continues today in front of Judge Cornelius Murphy.

- Olivia Kelleher

Loyalist feud victim `aware of threats`

:::u.tv:::
Monday 26 January 2009

A loyalist shot dead during a feud was unconcerned about two police warnings he was under threat in the weeks before he was murdered, an inquest was told on Monday.

Brian Stewart, a 34-year-old linked to the Loyalist Volunteer Force, was shot dead as he arrived for work in east Belfast in 2004 during a feud between the LVF the UVF.

Seven bullets were fired through the passenger window of Mr Stewart`s car by a gunman.

Coroner Brian Sherrard described the murder as a “cold and calculated execution of a defenceless man.”

The Belfast inquest was told that before his death police had visited him to warn him he was under threat of death.

Seven days before the murder he was warned again - this time that he was “going to get a beating and a good kicking.”

PSNI Sargent Michael Graham said when he visited Stewart to tell him of the first threat.

“He appeared unconcerned about the matter.”

When he went back less than a month later with the warning of the fresh threat, “he was unconcerned again.”

Stewart was believed by police to be a member of the LVF in north Down.

His brother, John Stewart, said he had been told the threat came from UVF in south Belfast.

Several witnesses told the inquest of noticing a silver Lexus car parked in a lay-by close to Mr Stewart`s work.

It had been stolen some days before the murder and was found ablaze immediately afterwards.

Detective Chief Inspector Debbie McMaster told the coroner the 9mm hand gun used in the murder had no history prior to the killing and had not been used since.

She said nine people had been arrested and questioned and 27 house searches carried out as part of the investigation.

But while there were “major suspects” no-one had been charged.

Mr Sherrard urged anyone with any information, however small, to give it to the police in the hope it would result in a prosecution.

Families fear inquiries into state killings will be halted

By Barry McCaffrey and Andrea McKernon
Irish News
26/01/2009

The family of a Co Tyrone pensioner shot dead by loyalists as British army soldiers looked on have insisted that they will not allow the truth surrounding her murder to be “brushed under the carpet”.

Rose Anne Mallon (67) was killed by UVF gunmen as she visited a relative’s home near Dungannon in May 1994.

It later emerged that British soldiers had secretly watched the attack but were ordered not to intervene.

Portadown loyalist Billy Wright was stopped at a police checkpoint a short distance away but released without charge.

Nearly 15 years later there has still been no inquest into the pensioner’s death, as Chief Constable Sir Hugh Orde refuses to release intelligence documents relating to security force actions on the night of the murder.

Ms Mallon’s family last night voiced concerns that the forthcoming Eames/Bradley report on dealing with the legacy of the past will recommend an end to inquiries into controversial state killings.

“Eames/Bradley should not recommend that the PSNI or any other arm of the state should be allowed to investigate these state killings,” the pensioner’s nephew Martin Mallon said.

“The state was supposed to be protecting its citizens, but instead it was allowing its agents to murder defenceless pensioners.

“Our biggest concern now is that the securocrats are going to use Eames/Bradley to block all inquests into state sponsored killings,” he said.

Kevin Barry O’Donnell was one of four IRA men shot dead by the SAS shortly after they attacked Coalisland RUC station in February 1992.

Nearly 17 years later there has still been no inquest into the killings.

Mr O’Donnell’s sister, Roisin Ui Mhuiri, accused the British government of deliberately blocking inquests into controversial state killings.

“The British government should have to tell the truth about the circumstances surrounding my brother’s murder,” she said.

“They shouldn’t be allowed to block us from getting to the truth.

“If Eames/Bradley are serious about allowing families to get closure, then they must stop the British from blocking inquests and recommend a proper international, independent inquiry into state killings.”

Meanwhile, a dispute last night continued over proposals for a £12,000 payment to all victims’ families during the Troubles.

Former Ulster Unionist leader Lord Trimble and First Minister Peter Robinson warned against the families of paramilitaries killed during the families being entitled to the payment.

Victims commissioner Mike Nesbitt also advised against a “one size fits all” solution to the issue.

“The money is as likely to divide a family as assist it,” Mr Nesbitt said.

Nationalist victims’ groups described the row as a “smokescreen”.

“For us the important thing is the truth recovery, it isn’t about a one-off payment,” Paul O’Connor of the Derry based Pat Finucane Centre said.

Briege Voyle, whose mother Joan Connolly was one of 11 unarmed people killed by the British army in the Ballymurphy area of west Belfast in August 1971, said that victims’ families were deeply concerned about the contents of the forthcoming Eames/ Bradley report.

“We need truth and justice, we need our loved ones’ names cleared,” she said.

Spotlight on women’s post conflict role

Derry Journal
27 January 2009

Hundreds of women from across Derry are expected to attend a community relations conference in the city examining their role in a post conflict society.

Derry City Council’s new chief executive, Valerie Watts and Felicity Huston, Northern Ireland’s General Commissioner for Income Tax will be among the guest speakers at the conference to be held in the City Hotel on January 28.

Funded by the Community Relations Unit through the District Council’s Community Relations Programme, the now annual community relations event will this year have as its theme “Women in a Post Conflict Society.”

Speaking ahead of the event, the Council’s Women’s Officer, Joanna Boyd, said the conference was a good opportunity for women from various religious, social and cultural backgrounds to come together to discuss issues relating to the post conflict years.

As well as having guest speakers, the conference will include a number of workshops and a questions and answers session, followed by refreshments.

Anyone wanting to attend or find out more about the conference should contact the Council directly on 028 7136 5151

Ruane to seek 11-plus approval

News Letter
27 January 2009

EDUCATION Minister Caitriona Ruane has been accused of making no effort to reach consensus on the future of the 11-plus.

The allegation was made as it was reported the minister is to seek approval from her Executive colleagues on controversial proposals to replace the 11-plus.

It is thought Ms Ruane will hand ministers a paper at this week’s Executive meeting on Thursday.

However, a DUP spokesman claimed their was nothing new in the minister’s proposals.

“These are the same plans which members of the Executive has previously told her were unacceptable. She appears simply to have wasted the entire period since then,” he said.

“The DUP has made a number of suggestions for resolving the matter in the context of the legal position that placing pupils on the basis of ability or aptitude cannot be abolished. The Minister has ignored them all.”

The issue has been mired in controversy with Sinn Fein and the DUP unable to agree a deal on the issue. The latter have argued strongly for academic selection to be retained.

Ms Ruane has indicated the transfer test will be phased out over a three-year period.

The final 11-plus in its current format took place last year.

Parents and teachers have become increasingly frustrated with the ongoing logjam.

Increasing the uncertainty, a number of grammar schools have annnounced their intention to set their own selection tests.

A Sinn Fein spokesperson said: “It is now time to bring the discussion to a conclusion.”

Past report ‘irreparably damaged’

BBC

A report on the legacy of the Troubles is “irreparably damaged” by a proposal to compensate the families of all those killed, the NI first minister has said.

Peter Robinson said it “not only blurs the line between victims and perpetrators but also ignores the tens of thousands seriously injured.”

Mr Robinson discussed the report with the secretary of state.

The report, which proposes victims’ families get £12,000, will be published on Wednesday.

“The DUP does not consider such an outcome as set out as offering any basis for dealing with the Troubles,” said Mr Robinson.

It was written by the Consultative Group on the Past, a group chaired by Lord Eames and Denis Bradley, a former vice-chair of the Policing Board.

“The report is also replete with a duplication of functions and roles which overlap, in many instances, with matters already within the purview of, and best left to, the victims commissioners.”

Bloody Sunday Weekend events

Derry Journal
27 January 2009

This year’s Bloody Sunday Commemorative March will stop in William Street - where the original march was stopped on its way to the Guildhall - the ‘Journal’ can reveal.

The annual commemoration march usually ends at Free Derry Corner but this year’s meeting point has been changed to William Street to signify how the families’ search for justice is being prolonged by delays in the publication of the report of the Bloody Sunday inquiry. Speakers at the meeting will include a Bloody Sunday families’ representative and members of Sinn Fein and the SDLP.

2009 marks the 37th anniversary of Bloody Sunday and the Bloody Sunday Weekend Committee have announced details of other events taking place this during the anniversary weekend.

Wednesday, January 28 -

8pm: Internment and Injustice 40 years on - A public event at the Gasyard Centre that will outline the historical context of internment as a state weapon and explore the use of ’special powers’ to effectively intern selected individuals, such as in the recent Terry McCafferty case. Speakers to include Tony Catney, Belfast (Republican Network for Unity)

Contact Danny McBrearty on dannymcbrearty@hotmail.com or 07515953790

Thursday, January 29 -

10pm: Bloody Sunday Memorial Quiz at The Crescent Bar. Price £5 per team of 5, all welcome.

Friday, January 30 -

4pm: A minute’s silence at the Bloody Sunday Monument, Rossville Street, to mark the time of the shooting on Bloody Sunday. All welcome.

4.30pm: Unveiling of the Bloody Sunday Banner, now on display in the newly refurbished Museum of Free Derry, Glenfada Park. All welcome.

7.30pm: Bloody Sunday Memorial Mass at St. Mary’s, Creggan. All welcome.

8pm: Dealing with the Past: Did Bradley/Eames get it right? at the Alexander Suite, City Hotel

Towards the end of January the Consultative Group on the Past (the ‘Bradley/Eames group’) will publish their proposals on how to deal with the legacy of decades of violent conflict. As months of speculation come to an end the Bloody Sunday Weekend offers an ideal and immediate opportunity to discuss the findings of the Consultative Group. Organised by the Pat Finucane Centre.

8.30pm: Screening of film ‘Sunday’ - Jimmy McGovern’s acclaimed drama documentary on Bloody Sunday, at the Telstar Bar, Creggan.

Saturday, January 31 -

6pm: Bloody Sunday Fundraising Concert: Songs of Struggle & Change at The Gasyard Centre, Lecky Road, featuring Joe Mulhearn; Eileen Webster; Gary Og; Cruncher O’Neill; Rory O’Dochartaigh; Tina McLaughlin; Declan McLaughlin; Barry Kerr and more. Admission £3.

8pm: Bloody Sunday Lecture - Clive Stafford Smith, Director of Reprieve/ Guantanamo lawyer - at the Calgach Centre, Butcher Street. The original Bloody Sunday march was held to protest the policy of internment without trial. It is fitting that this year’s lecture should host the leading human rights defender acting on behalf of those held without trial in the modern day equivalent of Long Kesh-Guantanamo Bay.

Clive Stafford Smith is the founder of Reprieve and has spent 25 years working on behalf of defendants facing the death penalty in the USA.

Sunday, February 1 -

11am: Wreath laying ceremony and prayer service at the Bloody Sunday Monument, Rossville Street. All welcome.

2.30pm: Bloody Sunday Commemorative March and Rally will assemble at the Creggan shops.

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