Belfast Telegraph

Watchdog accuses the parties of using victims of Troubles as political football

- BY MICHELLE DEVANE

VICTIMS of the Troubles have raised concerns they are being used to add legitimacy to differing political views.

Judith Thompson, Victims Commission­er in Northern Ireland, said they are often frustrated by the portrayal they cannot agree on a way forward.

“Too often in their view in politics and in media the voices of different victims are used to add legitimacy to differing political views,” Ms Thompson said.

“Victims and survivors find themselves, and they often are frustrated by this, used to illustrate divergent political narratives, often ones which they themselves do not fully agree with.

“It creates, I think, often, a perception that victims and survivors cannot agree with each other about the way forward.”

She added: “My experience and of the commission is very different.”

Ms Thompson raised the concerns at the Oireachtas Committee on the Implementa­tion of the Good Friday Agreement in Leinster House in Dublin.

One of Ms Thompson’s roles is to oversee the Victims Forum, a representa­tive body made up of people from all sides of the conflict who have lost loved ones.

Last year its members were said to be united in opposition to a proposed amnesty for security force members who served during the Troubles.

The forum, which includes ex-soldiers, also said there should be no statute of limitation­s on prosecutio­ns for legacy cases.

Ms Thompson said her first address to the Committee on the Implementa­tion of the Good Friday Agreement was timely given the 20th anniversar­y of the accord in April.

She said there was a high level of frustratio­n amongst victims because of the delays in the consultati­on process starting.

“To some extent obviously we recognise that those delays are related to a current political impasse and to other political events recently,” Ms Thompson said.

She said it was vitally important a historical investigat­ions unit, a body independen­t of police, be set up to investigat­e outstandin­g Troubles deaths.

“That is not to say that we expect the outcome of this to be a large number of prosecutio­ns, we do not given the time that’s gone,” she said, adding the value of such a unit would be evidence-based reports for families who deserve to know the truth of what happened.

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Judith Thompson
Victims Commission­er Judith Thompson

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