The Daily Telegraph

O’neill’s top aide allegedly part of Stakeknife IRA unit

Sinn Fein’s First Minister faces hypocrisy claim after media adviser is accused of links to ‘death squad’

- By Neil Johnston and Mick Browne in Belfast

‘This shows the dark secrets of some who are now working for Sinn Fein’

A SENIOR adviser to Northern Ireland’s new First Minister has been accused of being part of the IRA death squad linked to the notorious double agent Stakeknife.

Sean Mag Uidhir, Michelle O’neill’s Sinn Fein spin doctor, was interviewe­d under caution by the investigat­ion into Stakeknife, the British Army’s top spy within the Provisiona­l IRA.

Mag Uidhir, 66, previously known as Sean Maguire but who changed his name to the Gaelic form several years ago, is widely known to have been a senior member of the IRA in Belfast’s Ardoyne area during The Troubles.

At one time, he was allegedly part of the terror group’s internal security unit, which tortured and murdered alleged informers and was known as the “Nutting Squad” because of its method of killing victims with a shot to the head.

Also a member of the unit was Stakeknife, widely believed to have been Freddie Scappaticc­i, a bricklayer from west Belfast who died last year.

While carrying out killings for the IRA, Stakeknife was also passing intelligen­ce to the British Army’s shadowy Force Research Unit.

Stakeknife was the subject of Operation Kenova, a £40 million investigat­ion that lasted for seven years and published an interim report last month.

Mag Uidhir has been accused of acting for the “Nutting Squad” at an infamous abduction linked to Stakeknife in 1990 and was interviewe­d by Operation Kenova in November 2018.

The unit has been linked to at least 101 murders and abductions, while Kenova’s interim report, published last month found Stakeknife cost more lives than he saved through intelligen­ce. It linked him to a total of 14 murders and 15 abductions.

Northern Irish politician­s have accused Ms O’neill of hypocrisy over her employment of Mag Uidhir.

Sammy Wilson, a Democratic Unionist Party MP, told The Telegraph: “For someone who has said she wants to be inclusive, to try and reach across the divide, to be a First Minister for all, she is bound to know that having somebody like that as a communicat­ions officer is going to be provocativ­e.

“Even among the nationalis­t community there is great anger about the way in which people from Republican nationalis­t background­s were treated by the Nutting Squad and the misery that brought to the community too.

“Michelle O’neill must stop being a hypocrite in this way by saying on the one hand she wants to reach out and be the First Minister for everybody while at the same time employing people who she knows are provocativ­e.”

Mag Uidhir was in attendance at a press conference Ms O’neill gave as the Northern Ireland Assembly was restored in February, and she became the first nationalis­t to hold the office of first minister. He is said to be hugely protective of Ms O’neill and has played a key role in her election campaigns.

Born in 1957, he grew up in Belfast, attending St Malachy’s College from 1968 to 1975.

A year after leaving school, in 1976, he was convicted of conspiracy to murder two policemen and given a 16-year sentence, of which he served eight. According to court documents, he also has a conviction for possession of firearms and ammunition and was arrested in 1986 after informatio­n indicated he was a member of the Provisiona­l IRA and “involved in certain specific terrorist crimes in the North Belfast area”.

He was said to be “second in command” of an IRA unit involved in the abduction of Sandy Lynch, a terrorist turned informant to the British security forces, who was targeted for his apparent treachery in 1990.

During the 1991 trial of the men accused of the kidnapping, the court was told Mag Uidhir was number two to Kevin Mulgrew, another IRA member, according to reports from the time.

The Crown said that Lynch would “say he worked under the command of Kevin Mulgrew [an IRA member] and the second-in-command was Sean Maguire”.

John Creaney QC, prosecutin­g, said Lynch had been involved for “quite some time” in a provisiona­l IRA intelligen­ce gathering unit and had served time for terrorist offences.

“Lynch was also informing for the Royal Ulster Constabula­ry, both on his activities and those of the IRA he was privy to,” the prosecutor said.

As part of his court deposition, Lynch, who was allegedly lured to the house where he was kidnapped by Mag Uidhir, said that he was taunted for hours by his interrogat­ors. He made detailed references to Scappaticc­i, who he said led the interrogat­ion and threatened to “skin me alive”.

Gerard Hodgins, a former IRA member, was present but had his conviction for abduction quashed amid questions over the involvemen­t of security forces.

He told The Telegraph that Mag Uidhir had signalled the informant would be killed.

“He made a pistol gesture to his head and nodded back to the room where Sandy was being held, indicating to me, I think, that he believed Sandy deserved to be nutted,” he said.

He said he told Operation Kenova about Mag Uidhir’s involvemen­t because he believed the former IRA member was himself an informer. Mag Uidhir furiously denied this claim when it was first made in press reports in 2003.

Hodgins said Mag Uidhir’s presence at the abduction was “proof of how senior he was” within the unit.

“His actual title didn’t affect our thinking, we just knew from gossip he was head of this, or second in command of that", he said. “On the ground, we just knew who was who and how senior they were.”

He added: “Everyone knows he was there, his name is right throughout the court papers. Sandy’s testimony from the box puts him there and says that’s how he got to the house, Sean drove him. Sean was there as part of the ISU, he was interrogat­ing Sandy.”

Mag Uidhir, who is father to several children, left for the Republic of Ireland following the Lynch kidnap but later returned.

After the peace process and Good Friday Agreement, he went on to become the editor of the North Belfast News before joining the Sinn Fein media team.

The party is highly secretive and does not publish full details of its officials but he is listed as an author on the Sinn Fein website.

He has been described by the Sinn Fein-run newspaper An Phoblacht as the party’s “media chief” and has frequently been seen arranging press conference­s for Ms O’neill at Stormont.

Mag Uidhir was photograph­ed at the funeral of Martin Mcguinness in 2017 as the coffin was carried by the new First Minister, along with Mary Lou Mcdonald, the leader of Sinn Fein in Ireland, and Gerry Adams.

He also accompanie­d Ms O’neill when she visited Manchester in 2017 and signed a book of condolence for the victims of the Arena terror attack.

Jon Boutcher, the author of the Operation Kenova report and now the chief constable of the Police Service of Northern Ireland, said in his interim report that the activities of the Provisiona­l IRA he examined were the “most shameful and evil I have encountere­d”.

He said while there were failings by British security forces over Stakeknife, it was the Provisiona­l IRA’S leadership “that commission­ed and sanctioned the activities that its ISU carried out”.

Mr Boutcher said the ISU was “responsibl­e for torture, inhumane and degrading treatment and murder, including of children, vulnerable adults, those with learning difficulti­es and those who were entirely innocent of the claims made against them”.

Mr Wilson, the DUP MP, said: “I don’t think anyone with that kind of record should be in a public position and she [Ms O’neill] really has to explain how this is moving away from the past if she is employing people who have a known terrorist background.

“If it was the other way round and the deputy First Minister had employed a known loyalist terrorist, Sinn Fein would have screamed and howled at it.

“It also shows there still is that connection between Sinn Fein and people who formerly were involved in overt terrorist activity.”

Baroness Hoey, the Northern Irish politician and former Labour MP, said: “This shows the dark secrets of some now working for Sinn Fein. This must be looked into and Sinn Fein need to be transparen­t about who they are employing if Michelle O’neill is serious about being a First Minister for all.”

Ms O’neill reiterated her commitment to power sharing last week after Sir Jeffrey Donaldson, the DUP leader, resigned after he was charged with rape and other historical sexual offences, which he denies.

Mag Uidhir declined the opportunit­y to apologise for his actions as an IRA terrorist, and denied taking part in the abduction of Lynch.

His solicitor said: “My client, Sean Mag Uidhir, has always rejected any allegation that he was involved in the unlawful imprisonme­nt and conspiracy to murder Alexander (Sandy) Lynch in 1990, and has never been charged with any offence in relation to this.

“Mr Mag Uidhir has worked as a journalist and newspaper editor, is now employed as a Sinn Fein press officer and has been a vocal and consistent advocate of reconcilia­tion and the peace process.”

Sinn Fein and the Northern Ireland Executive were approached for comment.

 ?? ?? Sean Mag Uidhir (circled) at the funeral of Martin Mcguinness, at which Michelle O’neill, far right, carried the coffin with Mary Lou Mcdonald and Gerry Adams
Sean Mag Uidhir (circled) at the funeral of Martin Mcguinness, at which Michelle O’neill, far right, carried the coffin with Mary Lou Mcdonald and Gerry Adams

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