The Scotsman

Troubles amnesty would subvert goals of peace and reconcilia­tion

New proposals are not a response to the wishes of victims and people within Northern Ireland,

- Louise Mallinder

The Northern Ireland assembly, in a rare show of unity, has condemned the UK government’s plans to grant an unconditio­nal amnesty for Troubles-related crimes committed by security forces and paramilita­ries in Northern Ireland.

The sweeping proposals, announced earlier this month, would see those responsibl­e for killings, torture and serious injury being shielded from criminal investigat­ion, civil liability, and other formal investigat­ive processes. This would make prosecutio­ns impossible even for the most serious crimes.

The plan has provoked strong, and remarkably unified, opposition in Northern Ireland and the Republic. Even some military veterans and their campaigner­s, who would be protected by the proposals, have rejected them.

Victims and their representa­tives have expressed hurt and anger. Many of these families have waited decades to have their cases properly investigat­ed. They are vowing to resist the amnesty and strongly reject the government’s claims that its plans would be in their interests.

The government’s plan marks a dramatic, unilateral departure from its previous commitment­s to implement the Stormont House Agreement of 2014. That agreement, reached by the main Northern Ireland political parties, the UK and Irish government­s, called for a comprehens­ive and human rights-compliant approach to deal with legacy offences. This approach would include police-led criminal investigat­ions of conflictre­lated deaths, an informatio­n recovery process that could confidenti­ally receive and share with families informatio­n about their relatives’ deaths, an oral history archive and measures to promote reconcilia­tion.

The shift towards a broad amnesty is a response to independen­t decisions in recent years to open criminal proceeding­s against six soldiers in five cases related to killings during the Troubles. These are the first cases against security force personnel since the conflict ended in 1998. Three of them have already been discontinu­ed, but two remain and futher prosecutor­ial decisions are pending. The government’s decision also reflects its marked antipathy to human rights and the rule of law.

Although the new proposals retain the commitment to informatio­n recovery, they are unlikely to provide an effective alternativ­e to robust independen­t investigat­ions. Internatio­nal human rights law obligates the UK to conduct such investigat­ions for torture and violations of the right to life.

A 2018 consultati­on by the Northern Ireland Office found broad consensus among 17,000 respondent­s that the UK has “an obligation to seek to address the legacy of the past in a way that builds for the future”.

A clear majority of respondent­s rejected the idea of an amnesty or statute of limitation­s and “many were clear that victims, survivors and families are entitled to pursue criminal justice outcomes and such a move could risk progress towards reconcilia­tion”, according to the report.

The decision to pursue impunity for security forces and paramilita­ries is therefore most definitely not a response to the wishes of victims and people within Northern Ireland, including some of those representi­ng former security forces. Why then are they seeking to impose this illegitima­te, and most likely illegal under internatio­nal law, measure? The government plans use the term a “statute of limitation­s” rather than amnesty. This is misleading, as the amnesty would immediatel­y and automatica­lly end the possibilit­y of prosecutio­ns in cases that have not yet had a meaningful investigat­ion.

The report argues that a statute of limitation­s is necessary as allowing legal proceeding­s to continue would lead to lengthy and expensive investigat­ions with little chance of resulting in trials, which will inhibit truth recovery and reconcilia­tion. These justificat­ions for enacting amnesty are dubious, to say the least. Legal proceeding­s relating to serious violations committed decades ago are a complex undertakin­g. But the government has consistent­ly delayed and limited these processes by withholdin­g informatio­n from investigat­ors, litigants and their lawyers, and denying sufficient resources to prosecutor­s and coroners.

This government has also locked for a further 45 years, on “national security” grounds, public record files into the deaths of two children as a result of plastic bullets fired by security forces. Against this historical reality, it is very difficult to trust the government’s stated commitment to the facilitati­on of informatio­n recovery.

While victims and civil society groups widely accept that few criminal investigat­ions are likely to result in sentencing, they have called for the possibilit­y of criminal justice to remain open. They believe that investigat­ions with full police powers are the best means of obtaining informatio­n. In addition, previous informatio­n recovery processes in Northern Ireland, such as the Disappeare­d Commission, have shown that concurrent criminal investigat­ions do not prevent informatio­n being disclosed.

The government compares its proposals favourably to the South African Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, which was empowered to grant amnesty in exchange for truth-telling.

But the plan’s portrayal of the South African model fails to mention that keeping the possibilit­y of criminal prosecutio­ns open was vitally important in pressuring perpetrato­rs to cooperate, and imposing penalties on those who did not. In comparing amnesties around the world, I have found that democratic government­s only grant broad, unconditio­nal amnesty for perpetrato­rs of serious crimes where there is a very real and immediate risk of democratic collapse. For example, in post-franco Spain where there was a looming threat that prosecutio­ns could provoke a military coup, amnesties were used to protect peace and democracy. In the UK, investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns for Troubles-related offences would not imperil democracy but could have the opposite effect. These routes to justice and accountabi­lity are an essential feature of the rule of law in the UK. The government’s proposed impunity plans would potentiall­y subvert, rather than protect, peace and reconcilia­tion in Northern Ireland. Given the widespread opposition to the proposals from affected groups, the sweeping amnesty proposed by the UK government would have more in common with the widely condemned amnesties used by dictators such as Chile’s Augusto Pinochet and Argentina’s Reynaldo Bignone. Rather than closing the door on the past, it could open the door to further litigation, uncertaint­y and suffering for victims.

Louise Mallinder, professor of law, Queen's University Belfast.

This article is republishe­d from The Conversati­on under a Creative Commons license.

 ??  ?? Mark Kelly holds a photograph of his sister Carol-ann, who died after being struck by a plastic bullet in 1981
Mark Kelly holds a photograph of his sister Carol-ann, who died after being struck by a plastic bullet in 1981

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