Daily Mirror

Terror at graveside

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“WORDS mean everything over here. Terminolog­y is vital.”

Acclaimed filmmaker Vanessa Engle is in Northern Ireland and has been told quite firmly that she can get into quite a bit of trouble if she uses the wrong words.

She has even been told some people even object to the term Northern Ireland – it’s the north of Ireland. This is a place charged with a turbulent history and many years of conflict.

And at one of the worst moments, violence erupted at two successive Republican funerals in Belfast within days of each other.

It started at the funeral of three IRA members, shot by the SAS in Gibraltar.

Loyalist paramilita­ry Michael Stone killed three mourners, including IRA member Kevin Brady, and injured 60 others.

At Brady’s funeral three days later, two British Army corporals drove into the cortege and were beaten and killed by some members of the crowd.

It is only now – 30 years after the horrifying events in March 1988 during which hand grenades were thrown in a cemetery and soldiers were dragged from a car to their deaths – that anyone has agreed to talk about it.

This is a bleak documentar­y, which looks back at those catastroph­ic days, hearing from republican­s, loyalists, security forces and the victims’ families, and gaining different perspectiv­es. The news footage is, of course, not easy to watch, but it’s a compelling insight into the human side of the tragedies, as the people intimately connected to what happened share their moving stories for the first time.

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