Impartial Reporter

Loyalists tried to kill me - how far up chain of command did collusion go?

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I won’t hold my breath on either being allowed to happen without the brave persistenc­e of those seeking truth and justice, without which peace is an illusion.

The Kinovo investigat­ions now cover some 102 murders that in some way relate to the use of State agents, and they lay bare what we all suspected of the active involvemen­t of the State in the murder of its citizens; and the collusion of the State in prioritisi­ng protecting the identity of its paid agents above the lives of its citizens, including those in the paid service of the State.

The centre of the enquiry involves the small, tightly-organised Provisiona­l IRA internal security unit, which now seems to have consisted not only of the infamous Stakeknife, but possibly of more British agents than non-agents!

In reading through it, I kept thinking of the cases that are not within the scope of Kinovo, but which matter just as much to those who grieve the loss of a loved one, and who remain convinced that the perpetrato­rs are protected in order to hide the truth when the State breaks the law.

The Legacy Act is increasing­ly exposed as a cynical exercise in covering the State’s complicity.

As a survivor of at least two attempts to bring my own existence to an untimely end, I also feel obliged to point out that while three members of the UDA were arrested and convicted, having belatedly pleaded guilty, their decision meant the evidence of collusion emerging from the early morning attack on my home has never been investigat­ed.

The trio – mssrs. Watson, Smallwood and Grahame – drove to my home in a car legally hired in the name of a leading member of the UDA, who did not travel, on the production of that person’s licence, and the relevant documents bore his signature.

I presume the intention was to drive all the way back to Belfast and return the vehicle after a successful operation.

Neither the person who hired the car, nor the person who accepted the documentat­ion, were not questioned under caution.

This informatio­n was freely provided to us by one of the RUC investigat­ing team.

The guilty plea entered on the morning of the trial ensured that the military were not questioned about the time of arrival and duration of the presence outside my home of the Parachute Regiment who arrested the trio as they exited the house, rather than before they entered it, or why they provided no medical assistance.

The later arrival on the scene of the Argyll and Southern Highlander­s saved our lives.

They were unaware of the presence of the Paras on their ‘patch’ before being directed to the crime scene.

The role of State agents within Loyalist armed organisati­ons, like that within PIRA (and all other armed groups on the Republican Nationalis­t axis) has yet to be exposed, but it continues to beg one crucial question, as follows.

To what extent were 30 years of ‘Troubles’ – of death and destructio­n – orchestrat­ed and prolonged by the unlawful activities of uncontroll­ed networks of individual­s in the employ of British Military Intelligen­ce, who were strategica­lly placed both in the infrastruc­ture of the NI law enforcemen­t and justice system, and in the various armed organisati­ons within the community?

How far up the chain of command and authority did knowledge go, and to what extent were the decision-making leadership of both Republican and Loyalist armed groups infiltrate­d?

This question should be adjudicate­d at the Internatio­nal Court of Justice.

 ?? ?? Bernadette Devlin, speaking in 1969.
Bernadette Devlin, speaking in 1969.

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