Belfast Telegraph

‘Ballymurph­yMassacre’inquestask­s 119 ex-soldiers to provide statements

- BYREBECCAB­LACK

MORE than 100 former soldiers are being asked to provide statements to a new inquest into the fatal shooting of 10 people in the Ballymurph­y estate in west Belfast in 1971, Belfast Coroner’s Court has heard.

In total 119 veterans are being asked to provide statements to the hearing, which is due to formally get under way on Monday, November 12.

The evidence from the soldiers is expected to be heard early next year.

Soldiers have long been held responsibl­e for killing 10 people in Ballymurph­y between August 9-11 1971, but the accepted narrative became clouded earlier this year when former UVF terrorists came forward to claim their organisati­on was also involved.

The Coroner’s Office has been examining a database of names of former soldiers it received from the Ministry of Defence in August.

It aims to trace those who may have been at Ballymurph­y during the shootings to call as witnesses to the inquest.

Sean Doran QC, counsel for the Coroner’s Service, revealed during a preliminar­y hearing yesterday that the initial list of 60 soldiers had been augmented to 76, and now another 43 names have been identified, bringing the total number to 119.

Counsel for one of the families raised a concern that the process of tracing former soldiers has been “put on the long finger”,

Families of the Ballymurph­y victims outside the High Court in Belfast yesterday ahead of the preliminar­y hearing into their deaths

and asked for a deadline to be set for responses.

He suggested that the soldiers be legally compelled to co-operate if they do not respond by that deadline.

Responding, Mr Doran said a timetable will be drafted over the next couple of months for the evidence of military witnesses in the new year.

“The Coroner’s Service is doing

everything in its power to ensure proceeding­s remain on track,” he said.

Mr Doran also revealed the Coroner’s Service has received correspond­ence from the regimental associatio­ns of the Parachute Regiment and Queen’s Regiment querying whether providing informatio­n would be a breach of data protection legislatio­n.

Mr Doran told the hearing: “The response on behalf of the Coroner takes issue with that suggestion,” he said.

Coroner Siobhan Keegan put to counsel for the MoD that providing an additional witness to explain the context of what was happening in 1971 would be useful.

A Catholic priest and a mother-of-eight were among those

killed during three days of gunfire involving paratroope­rs that has become known as the Ballymurph­y Massacre.

Another man died of a heart attack following an alleged violent confrontat­ion with the troops.

It happened as the Army moved in to republican stronghold­s to arrest IRA suspects in the wake of internment.

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