The Herald

Ex-army chief sued over 1973 killing

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ONE of Northern Ireland’s most senior Army officers is to be sued over the death of a Catholic man in Northern Ireland more than 40 years ago.

Eugene “Paddy” Heenan, 47, was killed in February 1973 when loyalist paramilita­ries threw a grenade at the minibus carrying him and 14 others to a building site in east Belfast.

Mr Heenan’s widow, Mary, is now taking legal action against the Ministry of Defence and General Frank Kitson, claiming her husband died because of negligence and misfeasanc­e in office.

It marks the first time a retired senior soldier has been personally sued over alleged actions during the Troubles.

Solicitor Kevin Winters said: “This week we have issued proceeding­s against the MoD and Frank Kitson on behalf of our clients, the relatives of Patrick Heenan.

“These are civil proceeding­s for damages but their core value is to obtain truth and accountabi­lity for our clients as to the role of the British Army and Frank Kitson in the counter-insurgency operation in the north of Ireland during the early part of the conflict and the use of loyalist paramilita­ry gangs to contain the republic a n - n at i ona l i s t t h r e at through terror, manipulati­on of the rule of law, infiltrati­on and subversion all core to the Kitson military of doctrine endorsed by the British Army and the British government at the time.”

Gen Kitson, who is now in his late 80s, rose to become Commander-in-Chief UK Land Forces from 1982 to 1985. He was in charge of military operations in Northern Ireland during the early 1970s.

He has been named as a co-defendant in the legal action on grounds that he and others used agents knowing, or should have known, that they would take part in criminal actions.

Court papers claim Gen Kitson is “liable personally for negligence and misfeasanc­e in public office”.

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