Belfast Telegraph

Guerin’s brother in call for internment to fight drugs feud

- BY AOIFE MOORE

THE brother of a murdered Irish journalist has called for the return of internment to deal with an ongoing drugs feud.

Jimmy Guerin, a local councillor in Dublin and brother of the late Sunday Independen­t journalist Veronica Guerin, said politician­s must change the law to tackle the crimewave.

His comments come in the wake of the brutal killing of 17-year-old Keane Mulready-Woods.

The Drogheda teenager’s body was dismembere­d and left in various locations in Dublin, and his murder was linked to a feud between two criminal gangs.

Mr Guerin, whose sister was shot in her car in 1996 after her investigat­ive work exposed members of Irish criminal gangs, called for the return of internment, the controvers­ial policy of detention without trial of suspected republican­s during the Troubles.

“I will be far happier if a superinten­dent went to these houses, of people they know to be involved, and these people are arrested and interned, and at that stage then let’s bring the cases against them and let’s jail them for their crimes,” he said on LMFM Radio yesterday.

“It’s the legislator­s who make the law that we have to live by, the legislator­s can bring in the necessary legislatio­n.

“We did it in the 1970s, we did have a battle against the Provisiona­l IRA, and we interned people. Let’s do it now because of the drugs, and the cancer that it is in our society is just as big a threat to the security of the state as the Provos were.”

Mr Guerin said he knows the idea seems dramatic but the recent murders represent a turning point.

“I would have locked them up,” he said. “I mean, that sounds very dramatic yet, in reality, yes, I would do that today.

“We need measures put in place immediatel­y to protect the majority, not to worry about the civil rights of the drug dealers going around terrorisin­g people.

“If politician­s had the courage, they would put that type of legislatio­n in place.”

Noting similariti­es to the murder of his sister, Mr Guerin said media attention will eventually fall away from the feud and nothing substantia­l will have changed.

“I’ve always said that, you know, that it (Veronica’s death) was in vain and we failed to actively take advantage of our huge opportunit­y when there was public support and an outcry for action to be taken,” Mr Guerin added.

“In reality, what happened is that CAB (the Criminal Assets Bureau) was formulated, but for about 12 months, the resources were made available to the guards just to tackle the crime gang that were responsibl­e for Veronica’s murder, and it did have an effect and we saw drug criminals going overseas and they were afraid of what was happening.

“And then, like everything else and what’s going to happen in these recent tragedies and barbaric murders, as soon as it comes off the media attention, well then the resources are no longer made available and the overtime is not paid.

“I find it very sad, I have always said, every life is sacred.

“We could take action. We had six people murdered in seven months who had received warnings from the Garda that their lives were in danger, and they were also known to be involved in criminal activity, in the drugs, and had we interned these people they would be alive today — these crimes, these murders, would not have occurred.”

 ??  ?? Murdered: Keane Mulready-Woods, and journalist Veronica Guerin
Murdered: Keane Mulready-Woods, and journalist Veronica Guerin
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