Category: Ireland

  • UK Prime Minister  apologises for MI5’s role in murder of Ulster lawyer but wife slams report into police collusion in his murder

    UK Prime Minister apologises for MI5’s role in murder of Ulster lawyer but wife slams report into police collusion in his murder

    Pat Finucane

     

    • 38-year-old was shot dead in front of his wife and children at home in 1989
    • Report by Sir Desmond de Silva QC published today reveals the killing might not have happened without the involvement of security agencies
    • Widow Geraldine has repeatedly called for a full public inquiry
    • David Cameron admitted there was collusion between police and loyalists responsible for the killing but only ordered a review of the case

    David Cameron said the Government was ‘deeply sorry’ yesterday after a report into the murder of solicitor Pat Finucane found the security services colluded with the loyalist terrorists who killed him.

    A review of the case by Sir Desmond de Silva, QC, found the father-of-three would probably not have been executed by the Ulster Defence Association without the encouragement of British agents.

    Sir Desmond said state employees ‘furthered and facilitated’ the shooting of the 38-year-old, who was gunned down in front of his family in 1989.

    But his finding that there was no evidence of an over-arching conspiracy involving ministers or security chiefs to target Mr Finucane sparked calls for a full public inquiry.

    The widow of murdered Belfast solicitor Mr  Finucane slammed a report into his death as ‘a sham… a whitewash… a confidence trick’.

    Geraldine Finucane said Sir Desmond de Silva’s report was ‘not the truth’ and renewed her call for a full public inquiry.

    In a Commons statement today, David Cameron admitted Mr Finucane might still be alive had police and state agencies not colluded in his murder.

    The Prime Minister said the ‘appalling crime’ was the result of ‘shocking levels’ of state collusion and apologised on ‘behalf of the government and the whole country’.

    The de Silva review into the 1989 killing found that state employees actively ‘furthered and facilitated’ the loyalist murder of Mr Finucane.

    But the victim’s family have criticised the review, insisting only a full public inquiry will reveal the truth about his murder.

    The 38-year-old was shot in front of his wife and children at home by loyalist paramilitaries from the Ulster Defence Association in 1989.

    At a press conference after the review was published, Mrs Finucane accused the British Government of suppressing the truth while attempting to blame dead individuals and disbanded organisations while exonerating ministers, serving officers and existing security agencies.

    Mrs Finucane said: ‘Yet another British government has engineered a suppression of the truth behind the murder of my husband, Pat Finucane.

    ‘At every turn it is clear that this report has done exactly what was required – to give the benefit of the doubt to the state, its Cabinet and ministers, to the Army, to the intelligence services and to itself.

    ‘At every turn, dead witnesses have been blamed and defunct agencies found wanting. Serving personnel and active state departments appear to have been excused.

    ‘The dirt has been swept under the carpet without any serious attempt to lift the lid on what really happened to Pat and so many others.

    ‘This report is a sham, this report is a whitewash, this report is a confidence trick dressed up as independent scrutiny and given invisible clothes of reliability. But most of all, most hurtful and insulting of all, this report is not the truth.’

    Mr Cameron told the Commons said the review had found the Army and Special Branch had advance notice of a series of assassinations planned by the loyalist paramilitary group, the Ulster Defence Association (UDA), but nothing was done.

    The review found a ‘relentless’ effort to stop justice being done with Army officials giving the Ministry of Defence highly misleading and inaccurate information, Mr Cameron said.

    Successive UK Governments are accused of a ‘wilful and abject failure’ to properly control secret agents within paramilitary groups.

    Mr Cameron said: ‘It is really shocking this happened in our country. Collusion demonstrated beyond any doubt by Sir Desmond, which included the involvement of state agencies in murder, is totally unacceptable.

    ‘We do not defend our security forces or the many who have served in them with great distinction by trying to claim otherwise. Collusion should never, ever happen.

    ‘On behalf of the Government and the whole country, let me say again to the Finucane family I am deeply sorry.’

    The review found no evidence that any Government was informed in advance of Mr Finucane’s murder or knew about the subsequent cover-up.

    Sir Menzies Campbell, former Lib Dem leader, said he had never heard a statement in the Commons which filled him with more ‘revulsion’.

    However, today Mr Finucane’s son John said he could not believe that there had been a public inquiry into newspapers hacking mobile phone messages but not into state involvement in the death of a British lawyer.

    ‘We’re talking about the murder of a lawyer in the UK,’ he told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme.

    ‘I rather flippantly announced last year that I thought it would have been easier if my father’s phone had been hacked rather than being killed. That’s not in any way to disrespect the victims of phone hacking.

    ‘But if we can have an inquiry into something as important as that, this case is the murder of a lawyer which the British government have admitted there was collusion, you don’t then deal with that, such a fundamental attack on democracy, by holding a non-statutory review behind closed doors.’

     

    Mr Cameron has apologised more than once for the collusion between police and the loyalists responsible for the murder.

    But Mr Finucane added today: ‘An apology is not in the correct running order. You don’t apologise for something but then not fully admit what it is you’re apologising for. I think that’s what the Prime Minister has done.’

    The Finucane are unhappy that in 2001 the British government agreed during peace talks to meet honour for public inquiries into deaths. Of five recommended, four were held but in Mr Finucane’s case it was rejected.

    Mr Funucane said: ‘The only case that’s outstanding is the case of my father. This review, we feel, is the embodiment of a broken promise of the British Government. We do feel that if they are sincere in dealing with this issue then they need to grasp this issue and they need to deal with it in a credible fashion.’

    The loyalist paramilitaries shot Mr Finucane 14 times as he sat eating a Sunday meal at home, wounding his wife in the process. The couple’s three children witnessed the attack.

    The former head of the Metropolitan Police in London, Sir John Stevens, has previously investigated collusion claims surrounding Mr Finucane’s death.

    Shortly after starting the new inquiry, the Stevens team charged former Royal Ulster Constabulary Special Branch agent and loyalist quartermaster William Stobie in connection with the killing.

    But in November 2001 the case collapsed and he was shot dead outside his home within weeks.

    In September 2004 a loyalist accused of murdering the solicitor pleaded guilty to murdering him. Ken Barrett entered his plea at the beginning of his trial.

    Prime Minister David Cameron, who ordered the de Silva review, will deliver a statement to the Commons

    In 2004, retired Canadian judge Mr Justice Peter Cory, asked by the Government to investigate cases of suspected collusion, concluded that military and police intelligence knew of the Finucane murder plot and failed to intervene. He recommended a public inquiry.

    That year, Barrett was sentenced to 22 years’ imprisonment.

    In 2004, then Northern Ireland Secretary Paul Murphy announced an inquiry under new legislation introduced in 2005.

    The Finucane family opposed the Inquiries Act 2005, arguing it would allow government to interfere with the independence of a future inquiry because a government minister could rule whether the inquiry sat in public or private.

    As a result, plans to establish an inquiry were halted by former Northern Ireland Secretary Peter Hain.

    In October 2011, the Government ruled out a public inquiry into Mr Finucane’s murder but put forward a proposal for a leading QC to review the case. That review is to be published today.

     

    Former Met Police Commissioner Sir John Stevens published the results of his four-year inquiry into Pat Finucane's murder in 2003. The report confirmed that rogue elements in the security forces were involved in a deadly plot with loyalist paramilitaries to carry out a series of sectarian murders in Northern Ireland
    Former Met Police Commissioner Sir John Stevens published the results of his four-year inquiry into Pat Finucane’s murder in 2003. The report confirmed that rogue elements in the security forces were involved in a deadly plot with loyalist paramilitaries to carry out a series of sectarian murders in Northern Ireland

     

    Daily Mail

     

  • How Turks eased hunger of our Famine

    How Turks eased hunger of our Famine

    drogheda unitedBy Ken Sweeney Entertainment Editor 

    A TURKISH film that tells of how the Ottoman Empire sent food aid to Ireland at the height of the Famine will begin shooting here this July.

    ‘Hunger’ is based on events during 1847, when — moved by stories of the humanitarian disaster in Ireland — the Sultan of the Ottoman empire, Abdul Majid, sent £1,000 and three ships laden with food to Drogheda, Co Louth.

    “It’s a little-known but inspiring story,” writer and director Omer Sarikaya told the Irish Independent.

    The filmmaker will travel to Ireland in three weeks time to audition Irish actors for the project, which will be filmed in both Turkey and Ireland.

    “Our film tells an incredible story, but also the meeting of a Turkish sailor called Fatih, and an Irish woman called Mary.

    “This is a story of two countries coming together during sadness and a love affair between two people from different countries,” Mr Sarikaya said.

    Legend has it that the Sultan Abdul Majid had intended to pledge £10,000 to Irish farmers but that Queen Victoria requested that he send only £1,000, because she herself had only donated £2,000.

    But apparently the sultan, after agreeing to the change, secretly sent three ships to Ireland laden with food.

    The Turkish generosity is remembered by a plaque which was unveiled at the West Court Hotel in West Street, Drogheda, in 1995.

    Former president Mary McAleese referred to the episode when she addressed guests at a state dinner in Ankara in 2010.

    – Ken Sweeney Entertainment Editor

    www.independent.ie, January 23 2012

  • Aid offered to Turkey after quake – Republic of Ireland

    Aid offered to Turkey after quake – Republic of Ireland

    Aid offered to Turkey after quake

    People rescue two women trapped under debris after a 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck eastern Turkey (AP Photos)
    People rescue two women trapped under debris after a 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck eastern Turkey (AP Photos)

    Ireland has offered humanitarian aid to Turkey in the wake of the devastating earthquake feared to have killed up to 1,000 people.

    Tanaiste Eamon Gilmore said the Irish Aid Rapid Response Corps has been ordered on standby to deploy to the region.

    Emergency supplies from Irish Aid’s humanitarian stockpiles in Brindisi, Italy, and Dubai have also been offered.

    “It is imperative that the humanitarian response operation be rapid and effective to keep the death toll to an absolute minimum,” he said.

    The powerful 7.2-magnitude quake struck eastern Turkey, collapsing dozens of buildings into piles of twisted steel and chunks of concrete.

    Desperate survivors dug into the rubble with their bare hands, trying to rescue the trapped and injured.

    State-run television reported that 45 people were killed and 150 others injured in the eastern town of Ercis, but scientists estimated that up to 1,000 people could already be dead.

    “While Turkey has enormous experience in responding to crises of this nature, I have asked officials in the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade to assess how Ireland can contribute to the relief effort,” said Mr Gilmore.

    “In particular we are ready to deploy members of the Irish Aid Rapid Response Corps to Turkey to work with agencies engaged in the operation. We are also prepared to carry out an airlift of emergency supplies from our stockpiles.”

    via Aid offered to Turkey after quake – Republic of Ireland, Local & National – Belfasttelegraph.co.uk.

  • In Turkey former Blues star Trevor tells of sabotage by Israeli Mossad

    In Turkey former Blues star Trevor tells of sabotage by Israeli Mossad

    By Cormac Murphy

    Thursday June 30 2011

    2906 Trevor Hogan H 934591tA FORMER Leinster star and an ex-TD were among 20 Irish people who could have drowned after their aid ship to Gaza was sabotaged overnight.

    Members of the team have blamed Israeli secret agents for the sophisticated attack by divers.

    Only the action of the quick-thinking crew saved lives from being lost on the MV Saoirse, which is docked in Turkey.

    It was due to take part in a flotilla to the besieged Middle East zone but was “sabotaged” and will not now travel.

    Rugby player Trevor Hogan said the realisation of what happened has left crew members “devastated”.

    He said the boat would have been “well out to sea” before the effects of the attack were felt.

    “There would have been a loss of life on the boat. It’s pretty devastating. We’re all coming to terms with it at the moment,” the 31-year-old former Leinster and Munster star said.

    “It was definitely sabotage. It was a clear attempt to sink the boat and it would have been a gradual sinking.”

    The Israeli spy agency Mossad is being blamed for the sabotage.

    Former TD Chris Andrews told the Herald today: “The boat would almost certainly have sank.

    “We don’t know the precise way they did it but they cut a shaft so that we would have got out of the port but then it would have snapped.”

    Divers used an angle grinder to cut the shaft while it was at berth in the Turkish coastal town Gocek.

    Trevor said: “You don’t need to be Sherlock Holmes to work out who is responsible for this. Israel is the only one who is interested in stopping this flotilla and they’re using every means possible. It’s pretty worrying.”

    He wants the Irish Government to “stand up behind us and protect us” and called for Foreign Affairs Minister Eamon Gilmore to condemn the attack.

    Six of the 20 crew and passengers who had been due to travel on the Saoirse will now join the flotilla on an Italian vessel.

    “They’re not going to intimidate any of us. Our resolve is stronger than ever,” Mr Hogan said.

    The Israeli Embassy in Dublin did not provide a response to the Herald regarding the allegations at the time of writing.

    The Saoirse had been at berth in Turkey for the past few weeks. The damage was discovered when skipper Shane Dillon noticed something amiss and carried out an inspection.

    The boat was put on land at a local shipyard and the extent of the sabotage was immediately visible.

    “The propeller shaft had been weakened by saboteurs who cut, gouged or filed a piece off the shaft. This had weakened the integrity of the shaft, causing it to bend badly when put in use,” said a press statement.

    Dr Fintan Lane, national coordinator of Irish Ship To Gaza, which owns the vessel, said: “This is an appalling attack and should be condemned by all right-thinking people.”

    comurphy@herald.ie

    – Cormac Murphy

    via In Turkey former Blues star Trevor tells of sabotage by Israeli Mossad – National News, Frontpage – Herald.ie.

  • Mass appeal for bin Laden at Irish church

    Mass appeal for bin Laden at Irish church

    By MARK HILLIARD in Dublin, Ireland, and BOB FREDERICKS in NY

    The name alone got their Irish up.

    A Catholic church in Ireland has provoked outrage among its parishioners after announcing plans for a Mass to pray for the “soul” of Osama bin Laden.

    The Church of the Assumption in the affluent Dublin suburb of Howth distributed a leaflet to parishioners during its Sunday services that included details of the service.

    Listed under “Mass Intentions” for Thursday in the church pamphlet distributed yesterday was a call to prayer for “Osama Bin Laden (Recently Deceased)” during that day’s 10 a.m. Mass.

    Parishioners were immediately incensed, saying the idea of praying for the al Qaeda leader was an “insult,” particularly with the upcoming visit of President Obama to Ireland.

    “I was disgusted. I have family in America who would be disgusted,” said one regular Mass-goer. “The Irish-Americans would be absolutely horrified, as if we are on the wrong side.”

    The church attempted to play down the scandal yesterday, saying the request was probably taken down in a hurry and that the matter remained undecided.

    However, the parish note was removed from the Web site and it remains unclear whether the service will go ahead as scheduled for 10 a.m. Thursday.

    www.nypost.com, May 9, 2011

  • McDonalds distances itself from Facebook-based Dublin delivery service

    McDonalds distances itself from Facebook-based Dublin delivery service

    A McDonald's delivery scooter in Istanbul, Turkey. McDonalds Ireland has distanced itself from a delivery service set to launch in Dublin next week.

    FAST FOOD CHAIN McDonalds has distanced itself from a soon-to-launch Dublin service which says it will offer a weekend delivery service for fans of the restaurants.

    A Facebook page for the ‘Mc Donalds Delivery Dublin’ service was set up on Facebook on Monday – and had already accumulated over 6,000 fans by this afternoon, ahead of a launch next weekend.

    The service said it would offer home deliveries of McDonalds food between 6pm and 6am on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays – and its creators had insisted that it was a legitimate business, with their Facebook page complete with McDonald’s branding.

    This afternoon, however, McDonalds spokesman Ray Farrelly told TheJournal.ie that the service was “absolutely not” an official McDonald’s operation, underlining that home deliveries were “not something that we do at all”.

    “These guys have set themselves up as a private enterprise – it’s not something we condone because it’s up to our customers to choose,” he said.

    “There’s not a huge lot we can do, but they definitely don’t have anything to do with us.”

    This afternoon the Facebook page had its ‘golden arches’ branding removed, and previous declarations that the business was affiliated to the fast food chain had been removed.

    Its administrators disclosed that they “have absolutely no association with McDonalds whatsoever and do not claim to, nor wish to represent, McDonalds in any form”, and that their service was merely a delivery and concierge offering for people who wanted food bought and delivered on their behalf.

    Farrelly said that while McDonalds did offer home deliveries in some Asian countries such as Singapore, this was only viable in city-state environments were distribution times were not too long.

    “From our perspective we wouldn’t be comfortable doing it because we couldn’t stand over the quality of the food,” he said. “Anything over ten to 15 minutes and we couldn’t guarantee the quality or the temperature of the product.”

    The delivery service asserted, however, that its delivery vehicles would be fully equipped with “the necessary catering fixtures to ensure food arrives hot, and drinks arrive chilled”.

    The service will begin operations on Friday 6 May, delivering to Dublin 4, 6, 6w, 14, 16 and 18.

    via McDonalds distances itself from Facebook-based Dublin delivery service · TheJournal.