The Argus

Ludlow’s vow for justice goes on

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THE family of Seamus Ludlow say they are not deterred from their fight for justice, despite a decision on Friday last by the Court of Appeal to uphold a judgement by the High Court that refused the right to an inquiry into the Garda handling of the 1976 murder.

Mr Ludlow was 47 when he was shot dead by Loyalists in May 1976 in a laneway near his home in Mountpleas­ant, Dundalk.

The initial Garda investigat­ion was wound down three weeks after the killing. Suspects, some of whom were serving members of British armed forces at the time of the killing, were identified by the RUC in subsequent years, but no charges have ever been brought.

Solicitor Gavin Booth said: ‘ The family of Seamus Ludlow have faced many injustices along the way and they have never given up. Fridays decision was a minor set back, but the journey is far from over. We have better days ahead. Next stop is the Irish Supreme Court.

Meanwhile Dundalk TD Ruairí Ó Murchú described it as ‘another disappoint­ing day for the campaign’.

‘In 2002, the Barron Commission recommende­d the establishm­ent of a commission of inquiry into Mr Ludlow’s death, but it was never set up.

The family of Mr Ludlow took a case to the High Court in 2015 to force the State to set up the commission of inquiry but the High Court refused the applicatio­n and on Friday, the Court of Appeal upheld that decision.

He said that the Court of Appeal found that the refusal to set up inquiries was ‘not irrational and rejected further arguments of a breach of Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights, relating to the right to an effective investigat­ion into a death.’

That legislatio­n came into force decades after Mr Ludlow was killed and the Court of Appeal said it does not have retroactiv­e effect.

Deputy Ó Murchú, who has supported the Ludlow family’s campaign for an inquiry, said the decision by the Court of Appeal ‘shows the court doesn’t want to encroach on the powers of the Oireachtas, so the pressure needs to be put on in Leinster House to ensure that the next government establishe­s a commission of inquiry’.

He said: ‘I have spoken to the Ludlow family and of course they are upset by the decision, but not surprised by it.

They have been campaignin­g for justice for many years and they intend to continue that by using multiple means to bring a just conclusion. I admire their fortitude and tenacity in this campaign.’

‘ They are in discussion­s with their solicitors about their legal options.’

He added: ‘‘ The family has been failed many times by the Gardaí and successive government­s over many years and they deserve the justice that has so long been denied to them’.

 ??  ?? Seamus Ludlow.
Seamus Ludlow.

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