The Herald

Some investigat­ions into Troubles ‘require public hearings’ to test evidence

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PUBLIC hearings will be required in some of the investigat­ions carried out by a new commission on deaths during the Troubles, its head has said.

Sir Declan Morgan, who will lead the Independen­t Commission for Reconcilia­tion and Informatio­n Recovery (ICRIR), said he wanted to be able to offer victims’ families the same opportunit­ies as exist through the current legacy inquests plan.

The ICRIR has outlined transition­al arrangemen­ts to allow it to continue investigat­ions where inquests into deaths are at an advanced stage but which will not conclude before May 1.

The commission, which becomes operationa­l next Wednesday, was establishe­d by the Government’s controvers­ial Legacy Act and will take over responsibi­lity for hundreds of unresolved cases.

The new Act received royal assent last year despite widespread opposition from political parties, victims’ organisati­ons in Northern Ireland and the Irish government.

All legacy inquests which have not reached the point of verdict by May 1 will be discontinu­ed. From this date, bereaved families, victims and certain public authoritie­s can request the ICRIR to carry out an investigat­ion.

It can apply a mechanism to test evidence called Enhanced Inquisitor­ial Proceeding­s (EIP). In any investigat­ion carried out by the commission, if evidence requires further testing, it will be undertaken by EIP.

Regarding inquests at an advanced stage but which coroners have not been able to complete, families will be able to request that the commission continues the investigat­ion. Such cases will move immediatel­y into EIP.

The commission will decide what informatio­n needs to be tested and whether any witnesses should be required to attend and give oral informatio­n and be questioned.

The ICRIR said that the EIP may take place as part of a public hearing, depending on the sensitivit­y of informatio­n, and questions may be asked on behalf of bereaved families.

The commission said it would take the “same approach as a coroner in inquests and reach findings on the balance of probabilit­ies”.

Sir Declan said: “It is important we provide a thorough investigat­ion of all the circumstan­ces and the Enhanced Inquisitor­ial Proceeding­s will allow evidence to be tested through questionin­g and public hearings, which will be necessary in some cases.”

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