The Scotsman

Boris Johnson warned amnesty for Troubles killings ‘wrong’

- By JAMES WARD newsdeskts@scotsman.com

A cross-community group representi­ng victims and survivors of the Troubles has warned the Prime Minister it would be "fundamenta­lly wrong" to grant an amnesty for all killings during the conflict.

The wave trauma centre has written an open letter to Boris Johnson following the recent collapse of high profile legacy cases.

The letter argues that dealing effectivel­y with "complex and sensitive legacy issues" will not be done by "perverting the criminal justice system".

Proposals briefed to the Times newspaper in May suggested that the Government is planning to end all prosecutio­ns for suspected offences, whether carried out by veterans or by republican and loyalist paramilita­ries.

"Those briefings have confirmed that the core motivation behind the policy is not to deal with complex legacy issues in a coherent and sensitive way, but rather to protect veterans from potential prosecutio­n by a de facto amnesty that will include the very paramilita­ries who murdered their colleagues as well as thousands of civilians," the letter states.

"We simply cannot believe that veterans would want that to happen to the families of their fellow service men and women killed during the Troubles.

"If anyone in Downing Street or the Ministry of Defence or the Northern Ireland Office seriously thinks that an amnesty of this nature can form the foundation upon which reconcilia­tion could be built then it shows how little they understand the nature of the pain and trauma which continues to be suffered by victims and survivors and their families."

It emerged this week that the prosecutio­n of two former soldiers for Troubles killings, including two on Bloody Sunday, are to be halted.

Northern Ireland's Public Prosecutio­n Service announced that the case against Soldier F for the murder of James Wray and William Mckinney on Bloody Sunday in Londonderr­y in 1972 will not proceed.

The prosecutio­n of another veteran, Soldier B, for the murder of 15-year-old Daniel Hegarty in Derry later in 1972, will also not proceed, the PPS said.

The open letter to the Prime Minister asks: "Would the families of the 7/7 bombings, or the Manchester bombing, or any other atrocity be asked to draw a line under their own grief and pursuit of justice?"

Among the signatorie­s to the letter are Cathy Mccann, chair of the Wave Trauma Centre, whose father was murdered by the B Specials auxiliary police in 1969, in a case that remains unresolved.

In 1990, Ms Mccann was severely injured as the sole survivor in a roadside bomb in which a nun and three policemen were murdered by the Provisiona­l IRA. Other signatorie­s include former Wave chair Damien Mcnally, whose father was murdered by loyalists in 1976 in a unresolved case, Rev Dr David Clements, whose father was an RUC officer murdered by the Provisiona­l IRA in 1985 and Jean Caldwell, whose husband was murdered by the Provisiona­l IRA in 1992.

 ??  ?? 0 A soldier patrols along the Lower Shankill Estate close to the home of Loyalist prisoner Johnny Adair in Belfast
0 A soldier patrols along the Lower Shankill Estate close to the home of Loyalist prisoner Johnny Adair in Belfast

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom