On Wednesday (30/4/14) evening leader of the Sinn Fein party and member
of the Irish Parliament Gerry Adams was arrested over the 1972 murder of
Jean McConville after attending a police station in Northern Ireland
voluntarily. Sinn Fein quickly dismissed this arrest as politically
motivated and this seems likely to be the case.
Recently the government of Republic of Ireland (ROI) have been forging
closer links with the UK government which occupied and colonised Ireland
for the best part of 400 years. The most obvious symbol of this new
close relationship was the recent state visit of the Irish President to
meet the British Queen. For many people the tone of that visit was
Britain celebrating the regaining of one its colonies. Although Irish
independence hasn't been a major political issue in Ireland for the last
50 odd years this left a lot of people feeling uncomfortable at the
direction the Irish government is taking. This is likely to contribute
to a collapse of support for the Irish government with the Fine Gael
part of the governing coalition being particularly affected. So it
appears that what the UK has actually done is strengthen its links with a
small group of Irish politicians who will soon be leaving office. The
European Union (EU) elections that take place in a little over three
weeks are likely to provide the first real test of Fine Gael's
popularity.
As a result the UK has been going to great lengths to portray anyone who
supports the idea of Irish independence as thugs and terrorists by
digging up Republican murders and atrocities committed during the
Northern Irish Troubles. As was a hallmark of the Troubles murders and
atrocities committed by Loyalists are being completely ignored.
This began with the arrest of John Downey for carrying out the 1982 Hyde
Park bombing on behalf of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA).
In February 2014 he was released after it emerged that he had been
granted an immunity from prosecution as part of the Good Friday peace
Agreement. This prompted Loyalist politicians and their allies in the UK
Conservative Party to whip themselves up into a frenzy with some
calling for the Good Friday Agreement and therefore peace in Northern
Ireland to be scrapped.
Next came the arrest and charge of Seamus Daly over the 1998 Omagh
bombing - an atrocity so bad it is permanently seared into my memory.
Revisiting the Omagh bombing is of course a very risky course for the UK
to take because it is well established that the UK security service MI5
had such prior knowledge of the attack that they were able to watch in
real time as the bomb was driven from the farm where it was built to the
street where it was detonated but did nothing to stop the attack. So at
best the UK allowed the Omagh bombing to take place because it shared
Daly's Real Irish Republican Army (RIRA) objective of carrying out an
attack so horrific that it would collapse the Good Friday Agreement. At
worse the UK helped plan the Omagh bombing.
Then there was the re-opening of the Jean McConville who was alleged to
have been kidnapped and murdered by the PIRA because she was acting as
an informant for the British. So far this resumed investigation has seen
five people arrested and questioned by the Police Service of Northern
Ireland (PSNI) with only one - Ivor Bell - being charged with any crime.
Gerry Adams becomes the sixth person arrested and questioned.
With Adams still being held and questioned as I write the PSNI are
remaining tight-lipped about what evidence they have. However it seems
that central to the investigation are statements given by former PIRA
commander Brendan Hughes as part of an oral history project for Boston
College. Hughes died in 2008 meaning that his statements cannot be
introduced as evidence at any trial for the simple reason that it is
impossible to question him to find out whether he is telling the truth
or not. On the extremely rare occasions that testimony of the dead can
be used as evidence it has to be given in the form of a affidavit given
under oath in the presence of an officer of the Court. Without that it
is simply hear-say and no different from me turning 'round and saying;
"Last night I heard someone in a pub swearing blind that Peter Robinson
murdered Jean McConville."
So unless the PSNI have something much more substantial then the Boston
tapes they do not have the evidence to charge Adams over the McConville
murder let alone convict him. In fact it seems unlikely they even have
sufficient evidence to arrest him. Somehow though I doubt that the PSNI
will be admitting that before the EU elections.
(Originally Posted) 10:55 on 1/5/14 (UK date).
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