The Mail on Sunday

Fury at Corbyn’s f irst visit to Ulster as Labour leader

- By Glen Owen and Brendan Carlin

A NEW row over Jeremy Corbyn’s alleged IRA sympathies erupted last night over plans to make his first visit to Northern Ireland as Labour leader.

Mr Corbyn is t his week expected to exploit Tory divisions over Brexit by travelling to Belfast and visiting the border with the Republic.

But the Opposition leader, whose links with the IRA as a backbench MP were monitored by the intelligen­ce services, sparked Tory fury over a planned event during his visit.

Labour insiders said that the party leader was expected to speak at Queen’s University, Belfast, where the IRA shot dead a lecturer at the height of the Troubles. Tory Party deputy chairman James Cleverly accused Mr Corby no fa‘ callousnes­s and deep lack of respect’, while Democratic Unionist MP Ian Paisley Jnr challenged him to condemn ‘all IRA violence’.

Mr Corbyn’s visit comes as Theresa May struggles to reach agreement with her Cabinet over a post-Brexit customs agreement would avoid a hard border in Ireland.

Brexiteers, led by Environmen­t Secretary Michael Gove and Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, reluctantl­y agreed last week to an extension of the UK’s membership of the EU customs union beyond the end of the transition period in December 2020 to escape having to erect a physical border.

During his 30- year backbench career, Mr Corbyn campaigned for a united Ireland and shared platforms with convicted terrorists. In 1987 he handed a petition to then-Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher demanding better visiting conditions for IRA terrorist Hugh Doherty. Sources have indicated that Mr Corbyn’s activity led to MI5 keeping a file on him in the 1990s.

Edgar Graham, a 29-year-old Unionist law lecturer, was shot dead by the IRA as he was walking down Queen’s University Square in 1983. Sinn Fein’s Gerry Adams refused to condemn the killing at the time.

Mr Cleverly told The Mail on Sunday: ‘It’s deeply concerning that Jeremy Corbyn is considerin­g showing up where Edgar

‘Callous and a deep lack of respect’

Graham was killed by the IRA. It shows a callousnes­s and deep lack of respect. Corbyn gave cover to the IRA while they were bombing and shooting our citizens.’

DUP MP Mr Paisley said: ‘ I hope he sees this as an opportunit­y to condemn all IRA violence.’

Mr Corbyn’s office last night refused to discuss details of the visit, but a spokesman said it was ‘nonsense’ to accuse him of a lack of respect in choice of venues. He added: ‘ Jeremy campaigned for peace in Northern Ireland. To do so, he campaigned for the rights of all to be respected and spoke to people on all sides of the conflict.’

 ?? ?? SUPPORT: Corbyn, right, with former IRA commander Martin McGuinness in 1995
SUPPORT: Corbyn, right, with former IRA commander Martin McGuinness in 1995

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