The Scottish Mail on Sunday

ONE-SIDED VIEW OF A BRUTAL IRA MURDER

- Adrian Weale

Anatomy Of A Killing: Life And Death On A Divided Island Ian Cobain Granta £18.99

On the morning of Saturday, April 22, 1978, an ‘Active Service Unit’ (ASU) of the Provisiona­l IRA in West Belfast was preparing to carry out a murder. A few days before, an IRA intelligen­ce officer had passed the name, address and photograph of a Royal Ulster Constabula­ry (RUC) policeman to the ASU’s leader, Harry Murray. On the day itself, Murray, dressed in his best suit and took a bus to the mainly Protestant town of Lisburn. In a hijacked car he was driven to a residentia­l road on the southern edge of the town. He went to one house and made his way into the back garden, hoping to find the owner.

Constable Millar McAllister, of the RUC Photograph­y Branch, came out to see who the stranger was in his garden. Murray talked to him for a few minutes, then drew an old service revolver and shot him. The first round knocked McAllister flat on his back; Murray then shot him three more times as he lay dying on the ground, before running back to the car. The killing was watched by McAllister’s young son.

At first it seemed that the IRA had got away with murder. But days later, those involved were rounded up, interrogat­ed and subsequent­ly charged by the RUC. Murray and three others were convicted and imprisoned.

In Anatomy Of A Killing, journalist

Ian Cobain dissects both the murder and the context in which it took place. His descriptio­n of the killing is as compelling a piece of non-fiction as I’ve read for a while, but this book will nonetheles­s make some readers uneasy. I served in the

Army in Northern Ireland so I’m biased, but it strikes me that Cobain is too ready to accept at face value the IRA members’ romantic gloss on their actions.

Several former members, including those involved in this murder, spoke to Cobain, whereas it seems few ex-security forces personnel did, on the record at least. The result is that parts of the book are unbalanced and seem dismissive of the motivation­s of those against the IRA.

So the book is strong in describing the differing routes the IRA members took into terrorism; less so in explaining how their supposedly lofty ideals led them into murdering a man in front of his young son. The explanatio­ns the killers give are glib and unconvinci­ng.

Neverthele­ss, this is a useful contributi­on to our understand­ing of the conflict in Northern Ireland and an interestin­g – in places fascinatin­g – read.

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