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View Full Version : Terrorism sponsored by Britain - excellent article



Conghaileach
16th April 2003, 23:22
Terrorism sponsored by Britain
=====================
Beatrix Campbell
Tuesday April 15, 2003
The Guardian

So, Brian Nelson, secret agent and loyalist assassin, is dead. More than
anyone else he symbolised the symbiotic relationship between the British
security state and loyalist death squads - the radioactive core of the
report Sir John Stevens will present to Northern Ireland's chief constable
Hugh Orde this week.

As the "intelligence officer" for the paramilitary Ulster Defence
Association, Nelson was not so much a source for the security state as its
servant: he delivered its intelligence - profiles of republican targets - to
the loyalist killers who did the dirty deeds. Most notorious was the
execution of Northern Ireland's forensic lawyer Pat Finucane in his kitchen,
in front of his family, in 1989. No one has been prosecuted for Finucane's
killing. Now, Nelson, a key culprit, never will be.

In 1995 Stevens told the US-based Lawyers Committee for Human Rights that he
knew "absolutely" who had killed Finucane. His team also reckoned there was
little chance that anyone would ever be brought to court.

Finucane's family and friends have long been pessimistic about prosecutions,
and a criminal case would not touch the political system that sanctioned his
assassination. With no prosecution likely, the government last year conceded
a preliminary inquiry by a judge of international standing. That judge, John
Cory, began his work last summer and he, too, is expected to recommend a
public inquiry.

The story of Stevens' inquiries helps explain why. He has been ambushed and
sabotaged by both the army and special branch. His current investigation was
prompted by new evidence in a dossier compiled by British Irish Rights Watch
in 1999, the 10th anniversary of Finucane's death. Although Stevens has been
quarrying for evidence since 1990, it took the Canadian Judge Cory to guide
him to "intelligence" files he had discovered after only three months. If it
has taken Stevens so long to get to military intelligence, how long would it
take him to get to the politicians, the patrons of the army's activities?

There is talk of Stevens recommending charges against 20 members of the
security services. But he won't. He will send reports to the director of
public prosecutions, and the DPP has been notorious for not pursuing cases
against the security forces.

The only people the British government has taken to court in the Finucane
case are potential witnesses for the prosecution. Nicholas Davies - whose
book Ten-Thirty-Three exposed the collusion between the army's secret force
research unit (which harvested data on republican targets for the UDA), MI5,
the RUC and loyalists - was allowed no defence, no appeal and warned never
to tell what had happened to him. Irish journalist Ed Moloney was taken to
court for refusing to hand over his interviews with William Stobie, a UDA
informer close to the killing. Stobie was the subject of a failed
prosecution and then received loyalist death threats when he supported the
campaign for a public inquiry. This government decided not to protect him.
He was murdered by loyalists in 2001.

Stevens never seems to be doing what we think he's doing. We believe he is
investigating the Finucane murder. But his report to Orde is thought to
focus on ethics, practices and procedures. This will strengthen Orde in
sorting out special branch, but it is not the Finucane story. The timing is
also suggestive. Stevens' report will be presented on Thursday, the day
before the start of the Easter holidays.

So we may get a virtual prosecution, some naming and shaming, and Stevens
will retract his earlier conclusion that collusion was neither widespread
nor institutionalised. He will criticise "rogue elements" at senior levels.
But we should not be deluded - the evidence accumulated by journalists, by
the Finucane family and by investigative human rights organisations in
Belfast, London and New York all points to institutional collusion and
worse. As the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights said last year, behind
Finucane's murder was "a system controlled by the UK government". The
evidence prompts a fundamental question about the UDA's raison d'etre: what
was it if not an armed auxiliary of the state, "an extension of the UK
government"?

There is little stamina in the political establishment for what are
increasingly dubbed "these old cases". Blair, whose greatest achievement may
be peace in Northern Ireland, will dissemble the inevitable case for a
public inquiry. His crusade against state-sponsored terrorism does not, it
seems, extend to our own islands. If he refuses to be bold, he will staunch
our society's opportunity to know itself and change itself.

· Beatrix Campbell is writing a book about the Good Friday agreement.


Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003

praxis1966
17th April 2003, 02:08
Why doesn't any of this surprise me? Guess I'll just have to send more money to Friends of Sinn Fein.

Severian
17th April 2003, 07:07
No, none of it's a surprise.

It is a victory that the British gov't's being forced to admit some of the truth, though.

Makes it harder for them to continue to focus excusively on demands the IRA disband, while winking at continued violence by their Loyalist attack dogs.

redstar2000
17th April 2003, 12:43
Here is more on the story from this morning's BBC...

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/low/uk_news/northe...and/2954773.stm (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/low/uk_news/northern_ireland/2954773.stm)

Have you ever noticed that the truth about imperialism's "dirty deeds" has a habit of coming to the surface two or three or more decades after the events took place?

Sometime around 2033, we will learn what the U.S.-British Axis is doing to the Iraqi people right now.

Scumbags! :angry:

:cool:

praxis1966
17th April 2003, 17:51
Thanks for the link, Redstar. Just for the record, I'd like to let it be known that incidents like these are why I have the tattoos I do. Including the solid black band of mourning around my right arm, gotten as a permanent reminder of all of my Irish kin who have died in the struggle for liberation.

(Edited by praxis1966 at 11:52 pm on April 17, 2003)

Irish Republican
18th April 2003, 21:24
Just confirms what we have always known...

"And you dare to call me a terrorist?"

chamo
18th April 2003, 23:10
I'm sure there are many more instances of collusion of British forces and loyalist scum-bags.

Disgusting with what they can get away with really, including Bloody Sunday.

mentalbunny
18th April 2003, 23:13
It is truly sickening to see that everyone uses violence and other corrupt ways of covering things up that they wish to remain hidden. it makes me lose faith in humanity, makes me want to retreat from the world to somewhere where nothing can touch me, but instead we must take a very different attitude, no matter how hard it is. We must put pressure on people to play by the rules, not their rules but the rules of all humanity.

Severian
20th April 2003, 01:51
Quote: from redstar2000 on 12:43 pm on April 17, 2003
Have you ever noticed that the truth about imperialism's "dirty deeds" has a habit of coming to the surface two or three or more decades after the events took place?

Right. Prior to that time, you're a crazed "loonie leftist" if you talk about that stuff. Then by the time they finally admit it, it's ancient history with no relevance to the present day.