Irish Independent

McGuinness did dirty work to lure ‘informer’ to his death, said bishop

- Ed Carty

MARTIN McGuinness personally set up the rendezvous that led to the brutal murder of a suspected IRA informer, the Irish Government was told.

Previously secret files in the Department of Foreign Affairs in Dublin reveal the then-Bishop of Derry, Edward Daly, made the damning claim seven months after the killing of Frank Hegarty.

Bishop Daly said that Mr McGuinness normally did not get his “hands dirty”, but had run out of henchmen in the city.

Mr Hegarty, a Provo quartermas­ter in Derry, was abducted from Buncrana, Co Donegal, and shot in the head in May 1986 after he had been lured home with claims he would be safe. His body was dumped on the side of a Border road, with his eyes taped.

A typed letter, marked ‘secret’, was filed to the Department of Foreign Affairs by an official who had met Bishop Daly and talked about the execution. Released under the 30-year rule, it said: “The Bishop understand­s that, far from using a henchman (as he would ordinarily do), McGuinness personally arranged the rendezvous with Hegarty from which the latter did not return.”

Bishop Daly said the former IRA commander-turned-peacemaker had been doing “reckless things” at the time.

He said these actions would make Mr McGuinness “vulnerable if he were to come under media scrutiny”.

Over the years Mr McGuinness, who died in March, faced repeated questions over the Hegarty murder but always insisted he had “no role whatsoever”. The dead man’s family have said the former deputy first minister persuaded Mr Hegarty to come home. And Bishop Daly believed them.

It is understood Mr Hegarty fled to England, protected by British intelligen­ce, and is reported to have given informatio­n on a dump of IRA arms smuggled from Libya before being lured home.

Bishop Daly said Mr McGuinness assured relatives that Mr Hegarty would not be harmed.

The Bishop was reported to have said: “McGuinness would usually try to ‘keep his own hands clean’ in affairs of this sort but, with the number of Provo volunteers in Derry reduced ... by rumours that Hegarty had ‘squealed’, McGuinness was left in a position for several months last year in which he had to do much of ‘the dirty work’ on his own.”

Bishop Daly said he was certain Mr McGuinness was a Provisiona­l IRA chief of staff “at least for the North-West if not for the entire North”.

The letter was dated January 22, 1987. It was sent to Dublin and copied to the Tánaiste and the Ambassador in London.

It has been reported that Mr McGuinness met Mr Hegarty’s mother Rose on numerous occasions as he tried to coerce him to return home.

A sister of Mr Hegarty is also said to have unwittingl­y driven him to the rendezvous in Buncrana.

The documents can be read in the 2017/20/17 file from the Department of Foreign Affairs.

 ??  ?? Bishop Edward Daly
Bishop Edward Daly

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