Belfast Telegraph

Paramilita­ry crime watchdog to begin work after two years

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A NEW peace process watchdog monitoring progress on tackling paramilita­ry crime in Northern Ireland will shortly be establishe­d, the Irish government has said.

The Independen­t Reporting Commission (IRC) was agreed in 2015 between the British and Irish government­s and the Northern Ireland parties after a number of high-profile republican killings, but the time required to pass enabling laws in both countries meant it has not yet begun substantiv­e work.

The final piece of legislatio­n was signed into law by the Irish president last month.

Attacks by dissident republican­s targeting members of the security forces remain “highly likely”, the authoritie­s said, while unionists have expressed unease about the continued existence of the Provisiona­l IRA almost 20 years after the 1998 Good Friday Agreement largely ended violence.

A statement from the Republic’s justice department said: “The government­s of Ireland and of the United Kingdom will shortly be in a position to complete the necessary procedures to instigate the entry into force of the internatio­nal agreement establishi­ng the Independen­t Reporting Commission.” The body was agreed in 2015 amid concern over continued violence, decades after the conflict was supposed to have ended, fears which had endangered political power-sharing at Stormont.

The Executive has not sat for months over issues including RHI.

Two years ago, PSNI Chief Constable George Hamilton said the Provisiona­l IRA’s ruling army council still exists but was not engaged in terrorism. It followed the murder of ex-IRA man Kevin McGuigan Snr in Belfast that year.

Subsequent political talks to repair power-sharing at Stormont focused on tackling paramilita­rism.

The outcome was a new internatio­nal body, created by the UK and Irish Government­s under the 2015 Fresh Start Agreement.

The four IRC members will be former US special envoy to Northern Ireland Mitchell Reiss, ex-human rights commission­er and political leader Monica McWilliams, solicitor John McBurney and former Irish diplomat Tim O’Connor.

The commission­ers have met a number of times to carry out some preparator­y work in advance of the commission being formally establishe­d.

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