The National - News

No money or answers for victims of IRA bombs supplied by Qaddafi

- JAMIE PRENTIS

The UK will not try to access £12 billion ($16.45bn) of frozen Libyan funds to compensate victims of IRA attacks supported by former leader Muammar Qaddafi, Parliament was told.

The British government also decided against creating a fund for victims of Qaddafi-sponsored terrorism. It wants Libyan authoritie­s to pay for it.

It said it would not publish a report on the wider matter of compensati­on related to Qaddafi-backed IRA bombings.

The report’s author, William Shawcross, said he was “surprised and disappoint­ed” by the government’s response. But he said his contract with the Foreign Office prevented him discussing the contents of the report.

He appeared before the UK Parliament’s committee on Northern Ireland yesterday, where he said it was always his understand­ing that the 90-page report was confidenti­al and not for publicatio­n.

“I am aware, of course, of the agony of people’s expectatio­ns in Northern Ireland,” he said.

“It was brought home to me throughout my six months working on this, that the raised expectatio­ns and disappoint­ed expectatio­ns of people over years and years is a terrible thing in Northern Ireland.”

MPs and victim associatio­ns condemned the handling of the issue by the government.

The regime of the former Libyan dictator, who was toppled and killed in 2011, provided explosives to the IRA that were used in several deadly attacks.

Mr Shawcross said that he was “strongly advised” by people he knew in Northern Ireland not to approach victims or their representa­tives.

This was because it was thought it would “add too much to people’s expectatio­ns … that I was going to provide a complete answer”.

Minister for Middle East and North Africa James Cleverly said the submission provided by Mr Shawcross “was commission­ed as an internal scoping report, to provide internal advice to ministers, and draws on private and confidenti­al conversati­ons held by Mr Shawcross”. Mr Cleverly said the UK government could not acquire funds frozen by a UN resolution and the responsibi­lity for providing compensati­on lay with the Libyan state.

“However, there are clear practical difficulti­es in obtaining compensati­on from Libya for Qaddafi-sponsored IRA terrorism,” he said.

“The conflict, political instabilit­y and economic instabilit­y that have prevailed in Libya for most of the last 10 years since the fall of the Qaddafi regime present particular challenges.”

Committee chairman Simon Hoare said the government’s announceme­nt “will be a bitter blow to those who have waited so long for recognitio­n and justice and who were urged to put all of their hopes and dreams into Mr Shawcross’s appointmen­t”.

The decision “to do nothing” after much deliberati­on added insult to injury, he said.

“This important issue has never been treated with the seriousnes­s and urgency it required. The only upside is that at least, and at last, we now know, and victims now know, what the government’s final decision is,” he said.

“Futile hope can be extinguish­ed and my heart goes out to all of those who will be feeling so let down.”

Kenny Donaldson, of the support group Innocent Victims United, said the government was “heaping further pain upon those already treated so shamefully”.

“The Shawcross Report can’t even be described as a whitewash because it continues to be held back from victims – the full contents remain hidden,” he said

Futile hope can be extinguish­ed and my heart goes out to all of those who will be feeling so let down

SIMON HOARE

Northern Ireland committee chairman

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