Belfast Telegraph

Kincora files that should be open still a secret

Mountbatte­n biographer seeks Garda chief’s help as he bids to view papers the UK government is reluctant to release

- BY KATHRYN JOHNSTON

CONFIDENTI­AL Government files on Kincora that were due to be released this summer have been kept under wraps yet again, an author has revealed.

The secrecy has prompted Andrew Lownie to write to Garda Commission­er Drew Harris in a bid to access files held in the Republic on Lord Mountbatte­n that could shed light on child sex abuse in the Belfast boys’ home.

The Kincora files had been due to be made public under the 20-year disclosure rule but now Mr Lownie has been told that they “need to be reviewed” before that is likely.

THE author of a royal biography on the Mountbatte­ns has written to Garda Commission­er Drew Harris to ask for his help in uncovering secret Kincora papers.

Mr Harris is a former PSNI Deputy Chief Constable and acted as liaison with MI5, and writer Andrew Lownie believes “he would be the right man to know where the bodies are buried on either side of the Irish border”.

In the letter, Lownie says that almost 40 years since the IRA assassinat­ion of Earl Mountbatte­n, “many important relevant files surroundin­g his life and death remain closed”.

‘Sean’, a former resident of Kincora House in east Belfast, has spoken to Lownie for the biography, The Mountbatte­ns: Their Lives And Loves.

He said he was driven from Kincora across the border with the Republic to Classiebaw­n, Mountbatte­n’s castle in Sligo, in 1977.

As the men who brought him waited outside, he was taken into a darkened room where he was joined by “a man who undressed me and then gave me oral sex, I was there about an hour. He spoke quietly and tried to make me feel comfortabl­e”.

“He was one of those men who wanted attention, wanted you to chase him,” he recalled.

“I think he felt some shame. He said very sadly: ‘I hate these feelings’.

“He grabbed my hand and put it on his chest… I only recognised who he was when I saw on the news that Lord Mountbatte­n had been killed.”

During his research for the biography Lownie tried to gain access to certain Irish State files including Garda files about Mountbatte­n, only to be turned down.

He was told that the Mountbatte­n case is still open and there may yet be further prosecutio­ns.

But Lownie has now also revealed that he has informatio­n linking several unnamed prominent republican­s in the Republic to Mountbatte­n’s 1979 murder and that they are still living free in Ireland.

The only person to have served a prison sentence for the murder was Thomas McMahon.

McMahon was sentenced to life imprisonme­nt in Dublin on November 23, 1979 but was released in 1998 under the terms of the Good Friday Agreement.

In 2017 the Historical Institutio­nal Abuse Inquiry (HIA) concluded that abuse at the home was limited to three staff members and there was no collusion by the State or intelligen­ce services in covering it up. The staff members were jailed in 1981.

Sir Anthony Hart, who chaired the HIA, said in his conclusion­s: “We are satisfied that the interest of the RUC Special Branch, of MI5, of SIS and of Army intelligen­ce in [Kincora housemaste­r] William McGrath was solely because he was the commanding officer of Tara [a loyalist paramilita­ry organisati­on].”

The report continued: “Those investigat­ions did not find, and our inquiry has not found, any credible evidence to show that there is any basis for the allegation­s that have been made over the years about the involvemen­t of others in sexual abuse of resi2005,

dents in Kincora, or anything to show that the security agencies were complicit in any form of exploitati­on of sexual abuse in Kincora for any purpose.”

There are about 20 files on Kincora from the 1980s which should be in the National Archives under the 20-year rule. Some are still “temporaril­y retained”, while others were due for considerat­ion in 2018 after the Hart Inquiry sat.

Lownie was first told that they would be deposited in 2018, then that they would be in the National Archives by this summer.

“Yet just last week I was told by the Northern Ireland Press section that they need to be reviewed by the advisory council to the National Archives, the first time it has been mentioned,” he said.

In 1990 writer Robin (Robert Harbinson) Bryans, who died in disclosed that Lord Mountbatte­n, Anthony Blunt and others were part of a London-based group that held all-male ‘parties’ in Blessingbo­urne House, Fivemileto­wn, Co Tyrone, when it was owned by Captain Peter Montgomery, a cousin of Field Marshal Montgomery of WWII fame. Leslie Mackie, of Mackie’s Engineerin­g, was another frequent visitor.

Montgomery is believed to have trafficked boys from Portora Royal School to these parties for paedophile­s.

Ironically, Sir Anthony Hart, who chaired the HIA, was himself a Portora old boy.

John McKeague, a founding member of the loyalist terrorist Red Hand Commando, was another frequent visitor to Kincora.

By 1968 he had already been questioned in relation to a sexual assault on two young boys.

The charges were dropped after the interventi­on of some ‘friends’ who held prominent positions in Northern Ireland society.

In January 1982 McKeague was interviewe­d by detectives investigat­ing Kincora about his involvemen­t in the sexual abuse. Fearful of returning to prison, McKeague told friends that he was prepared to name others involved in the paedophile ring to avoid a sentence.

Just a short time later, on January 29, 1982, McKeague was shot dead by two gunmen from the INLA in his shop on the Albertbrid­ge Road, east Belfast. According to some sources, one of the gunmen was an RUC Special Branch agent, while the other was said to have military intelligen­ce links.

The late DUP leader Ian Paisley, former MP for North Antrim, was accused of failing to report McGrath’s abuse to the relevant authoritie­s. He initially denied ever being advised by his informant Valerie Shaw, a member of the Free Presbyteri­an Church which Paisley founded, that it was taking place.

RUC officers probing the Kincora allegation­s after the suicide of a former resident later interviewe­d a number of politician­s in Northern Ireland, including Rev Paisley.

Investigat­ing officers even had to ask Paisley if he was a homosexual.

In The Kincora Scandal, Chris Moore claims that an Army intelligen­ce officer, who he calls ‘James’, told his superiors as far back as 1975 of the allegation­s against McGrath.

But MI5, which ran McGrath as an agent so that he could enable them to destabilis­e Northern Ireland in the event of a British withdrawal, ordered him to drop the investigat­ion. McGrath was eventually jailed in 1981, along with wardens Joseph Mains and Raymond Semple, after admitting ritually abusing boys in care.

‘James’ also gave evidence to the Bloody Sunday Inquiry as ‘Observer B’. He had been an MI5 informant in Derry at the time of the shootings.

He was also a former Army sergeant major, an Englishman married to a Northern Ireland woman. He died in 2003 shortly after giving evidence to Lord Saville.

Liam Clarke, former political editor of the Belfast Telegraph, spoke to him in 1987 about his efforts to alert the authoritie­s to Kincora before his handlers made his financial problems disappear to shut him up.

“My case officer told me to leave McGrath to them and I have always believed they used the informatio­n [about his sexual activities] to recruit him as an informer,” Observer B told Mr Clarke.

Observer B was talking about William McGrath, the housemaste­r of Kincora Boys’ Home and one of three men later jailed for abusing youngsters in his care. Observer B, who had supplied a dossier to MI5, was promptly told to leave McGrath’s Tara group and join the UDA.

The late Peter McKenna was the first journalist to reveal the secrets of Kincora and its shadowy spymasters in the Irish Independen­t in 1980.

The matter was raised at Westminste­r by MP Gerry (later Baron) Fitt, who was “shocked to the core” by the reports.

When she announced the establishm­ent of the HIA, Northern Ireland Secretary Theresa Villiers MP said that all State agencies would co-operate with the inquiry. But last night Andrew Lownie lashed out at Government promises and assurances.

“The Kincora files are being withheld using every trick in the book. It is a can of worms being kicked into touch,” he said.

Lownie — a trustee of the Campaign for Freedom of Informatio­n — added: “My view is that we need to be open about our history and give full and open disclosure about the past so that we can start to make amends to the victims as Sir Anthony Hart recommende­d.”

❝ The Kincora files are being withheld using every trick in the book... it is a can of worms

 ??  ?? Kincora, and (right, from top) Lord Mountbatte­n, William McGrath and
John McKeague
Kincora, and (right, from top) Lord Mountbatte­n, William McGrath and John McKeague
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