Title: | Celt Notefile |
Moderator: | TALLIS::DARCY |
Created: | Wed Feb 19 1986 |
Last Modified: | Tue Jun 03 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1632 |
Total number of notes: | 20523 |
*********** DADDY, DON'T DIE; Even if the IRA upholds a ceasefire, peace may come too late for many families in Northern Ireland. On both sides of the sectarian divide, the children of the dead live on with memories of bombs and slaughter. Half of them develop symptoms of post-traumatic stress, including a fear of being alone, irritability and restlessness, or cry for no apparent reason. Some of the Catholic children who have witnessed the killings, like those pictured above, talked to Suzanne Breen The Guardian December 17, 1993 The children's voices fall to a whisper as they recall the horrific details of the night three months ago, when UDA gunmen sledgehammered their way into the family's home. The six Edwards children have forgotten nothing: the gunfire jolting them from sleep, their father sprawled across the bedroom floor, the carpet crimson with his blood, and a big ugly bullet-hole scarring the bed. "We just shouted 'Daddy, don't die, please don't die'," says Eileen, aged 15. "Mummy was crying and begging daddy to live," says Michael, aged 14. "I heard the noise but I didn't know they'd shot my daddy," adds Emma, 4. "I thought he was sick from eating too many sweets." The children recount how they waited outside while medics battled to save their father's life, how detectives ordered them not to touch anything in case they destroyed forensic evidence, how they prayed that Mickey would live, and how there were tears streaming down the face of the RUC officer who broke the news that he had died. Marie Edwards, aged 36, didn't hear the gunmen breaking down the front door of her home in Finaghy, south Belfast, at midnight on August 31. "We just woke up to find a masked man in the bedroom with a gun. He fired at Mickey, and Mickey fell out of bed and he shot him again." The second attacker waited on the landing. Mickey Edwards was a working-class Catholic who had done well. He owned a small shop on the Glen Road in west Belfast. He was not a member of any paramilitary group or political party. He was killed simply because he was a Catholic. Emma was her father's blue-eyed girl. She knows he is dead but she can't quite understand the implications. Curled up on her mother's knee, she announces that she loves Mickey "more than anybody else in the world" and that she needs to speak to him now. "I saw a phone box when we were out shopping," she confides, "and I wanted to ring my daddy in Heaven but mummy said I couldn't. God's a very bad man for not letting me talk to my daddy." She pesters Marie for details about the shooting which she has missed. "Was my daddy taken away in an ambulance? What were the seats like? Did you hold his hand?" You can tell from the Communion photograph on the mantelpiece that they were a happy family. Real warmth and love shine through. And anyway, Emma lets the cat out of the bag. "My mummy and daddy used to kiss each other in the back yard," she says, waving a stubby finger in mock disapproval. The children remember Mickey as a perfect father. "He'd work all day in the shop but still sit up to 1am to help me with my maths homework," says Eileen. The weekend before he died, he gave her money to go to the U2 concert in Dublin. "Mummy complained a bit, but daddy just laughed and said: "Weren't we all young once?" Michael and Katherine, aged 6, talk of trips to the seaside, learning to play golf, camping holidays in Brittany, and plans for a visit to EuroDisney. They cannot bear to think of Christmas. They all have difficulty sleeping at night. Eileen has slept in her mother's bedroom since the shooting. She keeps replaying the whole episode over and over in her mind, "We all jump at the slightest sound at night," she says. "We know that the gunmen probably won't come back, that bad things don't happen twice, but the fear is always there, lurking at the back of our minds. No one has been arrested for killing daddy." Joseph, aged 13, has nightmares, and Marie often finds Michael crying alone in his room. The children don't discuss the shooting with their friends, but they do see a psychiatrist regularly. "The counselling doesn't really help much though," says Michael. "Talking is too painful." A few miles up the road from the Edwards' home, schoolgirls Frances and Aine Armstrong conduct whirlwind tours of their house in Twinbrook. Visitors can see the metal gate at the bottom of the staircase, the heavy reinforced doors into every room, the thick iron drop-bars, and the laminated glass which will stop grenades but not gunfire. A security camera is trained on the street outside. Its monitor sits next to a Sacred Heart statue in the corner of the living room. Frances and Aine munch toast as they show you around the prison they call home. Their mother Annie is a Sinn Fein member of Lisburn Borough Council. Aine, aged 9, holds up the curtains, riddled with bullet-holes from a UDA attack four months ago. Frances, aged 11, points to the shattered skirting board and the fireplace. "I was lying there, watching television seconds beforehand," she says. It was 11.15pm on July 27. Frances heard a car pull up outside the house. Michael, aged 15, was upstairs with Aine. Frances pulled back the curtain and looked out the window. "I saw a man wearing a baseball cap, coming up the garden. It was pretty suspicious. The buzzer on the intercom went. Mummy and I walked to the other side of the room to answer it. 'Is John there?' a voice asked. 'There's no John here,' mummy said. And then the shooting started." Frances huddled with her mother in the corner, screaming her head off, while the room was raked with gunfire. Aine was lucky. She was about to go downstairs when the first shots rang out, but Michael hurled her into the bathroom. Thinking his mother had been killed, he punched his fist through the wall in frustration and rage. He was taken to hospital for sedation. He is still on tranquillisers. Annie had feared for her family's safety after receiving 18 threatening phone calls over one weekend, eight months earlier. A man with a Geordie accent, who identified himself as a memeber of the First Paratroopers, claimed to have passed on her details to loyalists and that "me and the kids were going to be wiped out," Annie says. She taped some of the calls. Her children have been receiving counselling since the shooting. Aine is plagued by nightmares. She shows pictures of blood and bullets and "a bad man shooting my mummy". She finds it difficult to settle at school. FRANCES becomes hysterical when Annie heads off to a council meeting. She is afraid to be alone downstairs at night. The fear with which the Armstrongs live is obvious. They are sitting around the fire on a frosty December evening, recounting the shooting, when the camera outside picks up the outline of a male figure. The room falls silent as the buzzer rings. But then a familiar voice comes over the intercom and there is an audible sigh of relief. It's only Michael, back from band practice without his key. The bolts are unlocked and the door heaved open.
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1304.1 | KERNEL::BARTHUR | Mon Dec 20 1993 13:27 | 2 | ||
what's the point you trying to make by posting the article Mark? | |||||
1304.2 | KOALA::HOLOHAN | Mon Dec 20 1993 14:40 | 12 | ||
re. 1 There is no point other than making the net community aware of the kind of suffering that is reaped upon the innocent by the British. Most importantly I find myself questioning the British government, who purport to want peace, yet at the same time have their occupying troops actively collude with these loyalist murder gangs (AI: report on collusion). Mark | |||||
1304.3 | NOVA::EASTLAND | Mon Dec 20 1993 14:56 | 4 | ||
Why not type in this famous AI report on collusion, in its entirety. That should keep you busy for a bit. Then we can comment on it. | |||||
1304.4 | AI report on collusion (Section 5 of AI report on UK Human Rights Concerns) | KOALA::HOLOHAN | Mon Dec 20 1993 15:11 | 170 | |
Amnesty International United Kingdom Human Rights Concerns June 1991 Section 5: Collusion between security forces and armed groups In September 1989 evidence emerged that in Northern Ireland, security intelligence files on Republican suspects had been handed over by members of the security forces to Loyalist armed groups, who had allegedly used the files in some cases to target individuals and kill them. These files had in the past been widely distributed to police and soldiers for identification purposes. They included pictures, names, addresses, car registration numbers and sometimes other details about the suspects' movements. The information emerged after the Loyalist armed group, the Ulster Volunterr Force (UVF), killed Loughlin Maginn in August, saying that he was a liaison officer of the Irish Republican Army (IRA). When the family challenged the veracity of this claim, the UVF said that they had obtained their information from police files. Loughlin Maginn's solictor said he had documented the harassment of his client by the RUC including death threats and regular photographing. Security documents concerning suspects were subsequently found to be missing from the Dunmurry RUC station in Belfast and the Ballykinlar Ulser Defence Regiment (UDR) base in County Down. In response, the Chief constable of the RUC appointed John Stevens, the Deputy Chief Constable of Cambridgeshire, to investigate the sources of these security leaks. This investigation commenced on 14 September 1989. By the end of September John Stevens had a 19-person team to assist his inquiry. The Stevens inquiry was not supervised by the Independent Commission for Police Complaints(ICPC). From the middle of September to the middle of October there was a steady stream of security documents being sent to newspapers and politicians, some by members of the security forces and some by members of the Loyalist groups. By the end of September lists containing over 250 names had been leaked to the media. Many people whose names appeared on the lists complained that they were not immediately notified by the police, and that they were not told what exact information may be in the hands of the Loyalist armed groups. On 2 October 1989 the Irish News stated that it had received information concerning the existence of an "Inner Circle" within the RUC which was "pledged to eradicating republican terrorism, and to bringing down the Anglo-Irish Agreement". It claimed to have members in 36 our of the 37 RUC subdivisions in Northern Ireland. The Inner Circle reportedly had close links with the Ulster Resisistance Movement, a Loyalist group. The journalist alleged that he had been shown very detailed files on 233 suspects. The Chief Constable dismissed the existence of such an inside grouping as "arrant nonsense" but said that the Stevens inquiry would investigate the allegation. There were a number of arrests in connection with the inquiry, mainly of members of the Ulster Defence Association and the Ulster Defence Regiment (UDR, a regiment of the British Army). On one particular occasion it was alleged that the targets of a police raid were informed of it days before, allowing them to escape arrest. Three men, including two UDR soldiers, were charged with Loughlin Maginn's murder. Andrew Browne, one of the UDR soldiers, stated at the bail hearing that he had passed on names of 14 suspects to the UDA, had followed some of them and gathered information, and had passed on ammunition. He targeted Loughlin Maginn on six occasions while on duty - going to his home to identify him, checking the car outside the home and noting his movements. This information was also given to the UDA. Earlier in the year two members of the security forces had been given 18-month suspended sentences for passing confidential files and photographs of IRA suspects to Loyalist organizations that carry out sectarian killings. One of them remained in the British Army. Their trial lasted 40 minutes - the Crown did not go into detail about what the two had said during interrogation (that is, that they passed on these documents knowing that they could be used for murder). Of the people whose names had been in the documents, Adrian McDaid's brother, Terence, had been killed and Patrick Fitzpatrick had been seriously wounded. The Dublin-based Sunday Tribune on 5 November 1989 published a long article, based on trial depositions which were not used in court. The depositions showed the close and open nature of relationships between a UDR member and UDA/UVF members. In October 1989 the RUC announced that it had tightened up procedures for signing out intelligence material. Reforms of the UDR were also announced, including new procedures for recruitment screening and for handling security material. The Stevens inquiry was completed in March 1990, and the findings of the inquiry were submitted to the Chief Constable the following month. A summary of the report of the Stevens inquiry was released in May 1990 and set out many recommendations. As a result of the inquiry, 59 people were charged or reported to the Director of Public Prosecutions. Two UDR soldiers and one British soldier were charged with responsibility for 59 of the 187 documents estimated to have gone missing at the end of September. The other offences included the unlawful possesion of documents and communicating them to others without authorizations; firearms offences; and possessing documents, collecting and recording security information. The overwhelming majority of those arrested were civilians (32 were members of Loyalist organizations), including Brian Nelson, who was charged with having documents which contained information about IRA suspects likely to be of use to terrorists. Reports that Brian Nelson had been both a British military intelligence agent and the intelligence information officer for the Ulster Defence Association (UDA), which has links with the UFF, gave rise to claimis that the authorities had been aware for some years, through him, of the extent of collusion between the security forces and the UDA. Charges were dropped in October 1990 against five UDA men. The Stevens inquiry report noted that "in the present climate" in Northern Ireland leaks of official security information " may never be completely eliminated". However, it stated that measures already taken had reduced the opportunity for such leaks; and that "the passing of information had been restricted to a small number of individuals". The inquiry was limited in its scope and it had failed to identify members of the security forces involved in passing on information to armed Loyalist groups. Amnesty International monitored these developments because it was concerned that members of the security forces used their official status to target suspected members of opposition groups for murder. For the security forces to have the confidence of the public, they have to be seen to be impartial. For the government to have the confidence of the public, it has to be seen to ensure that its agents operate within the law and are impartial. For this reason, the Stevens inquiry would have been very important if the scope had been wide enougth to look at the issue of collusion as a whole; unfortunately the inquiry was limited to leaks of security documents at the time and other issues which had come up and been referrred to it. It did not look at the evidence that collusion had been going on for many years, and at what role the authorities had played during this time, including bringing criminal proceedings. Nor did it look into how the authorities dealt with allegations of partiality, for example, soldiers shouting verbal abuse at Catholics or writing graffiti on walls. Nor did it look into allegations that RUC officers regularly drew detailed layouts of houses during house searches. Amnesty International was also concerned about allegations that the security forces had targeted the lawyer Patrick Finucane, whose killing was attributed to the UFF in Febuary 1989. The weapon that killed him belonged to the UDR and was stolen by a member of the UDR from Palace Barracks in 1987, who had passed it on to the UFF. The UDR member was jailed for stealing weapons. The weapon was later found during a house raid in Belfast and identified through ballistics tests as the murder weapon. No one has been charged with the murder. A year before his death Amnesty International had heard form a former detaineee that during interrogation a Castlereagh the police had said his lawyer, Patrick Finucane, would be killed. The organization had been told by Patrick Finucane in the years preceding his death that police officers often referred to him as an "IRA lawyer" and tried to dissuade detainees from calling him. Loyalist sources claimed that prior to the killing UDA members detained at Castlereagh had been told by detectives that Mr. Finucane and a few other solicitors were IRA members and implied that they should be shot. Although some of them were later arrested by the Stevens team, apparently none of them had been questioned about these allegations. Furthermore it was reported that Brian Nelson, the alleged army and UDA intelligence officer questioned by the inquiry, knew that Patrick Finucane would be shot, and indeed that he had been involved in providing intelligence which led to the lawyer's killing. The allegations about RUC collusion with Loyalist groups in the murder were handed over to the Stevens inquiry to investigate. A police witeness told the inquest that allegations about threats made by the RUC against Patrick Finucane to his clients had been investigated and there was "overwhelming evidence and intelligence to show quite the contrary". Allegations of a similar nature were made by people detained at the Castelreagh in October 1990. One person claimed that a detective said his lawyere was a Provo, meaning an IRA member; and that threats were made against himself and his lawyer. The lawyer said that " it was part of an ongoing process to scandalise solicitors acting on behalf of arrested persons". | |||||
1304.5 | NOVA::EASTLAND | Mon Dec 20 1993 15:36 | 6 | ||
I don't see any evidence there that the " British government, who purport to want peace, yet at the same time have their occupying actively collude with these loyalist murder gangs (AI: report on collusion)". It doesn't make that claim at all. | |||||
1304.6 | KOALA::HOLOHAN | Mon Dec 20 1993 16:37 | 8 | ||
re. .5 Nope, I made that claim. AI documents collusion, the Guardian documented the result of Loyalist terrorism and I equate this to not being really interested in peace. Mark | |||||
1304.7 | NOVA::EASTLAND | Mon Dec 20 1993 16:47 | 4 | ||
Oh well that counts for nothing then. However, your .2 and other notes elsewhere certainly imply AI backs up your claim. | |||||
1304.8 | KOALA::HOLOHAN | Mon Dec 20 1993 16:56 | 6 | ||
re. .7 AI documents collusion between the British forces and the loyalist terrorist. Mark | |||||
1304.9 | NOVA::EASTLAND | Mon Dec 20 1993 17:01 | 6 | ||
Don't be coy. You made it sound like they documented collusion between HMG and the loyalist terrorists. By the way, why are you calling them terrorists and not freedom fighters. tsch tsch - not very er fair of you. | |||||
1304.10 | KERNEL::BARTHUR | Tue Dec 21 1993 07:21 | 9 | ||
I think the posting of the article is quite sick! I also cannot imagine the harrowing effect of relatives having to identify bodies lying in mortuarys that have been decapitated and had their skin torn off by bomb blasts that were triggered by the "brave freedom fighters". You're a sick man Holohan | |||||
1304.11 | KOALA::HOLOHAN | Tue Dec 21 1993 09:08 | 15 | ||
re. 10 Sure Bill, see no, hear no, speak no evil. If you would rather not read the news, then hit next unseen when you see a news article and let yourself remain ignorant. re. .9 Amnesty International has documented collusion between British forces and loyalist terrorists. Who controls the British Army? Why, HMG I would suppose. Mark | |||||
1304.12 | YUPPY::MILLARB | Tue Dec 21 1993 09:30 | 25 | ||
re .11 Mark do you really believe that descriptions like this are news to anybody over here. ?? ie. I had breakfast today. That is hardly news is it. One thing that is curious Mark. None of your "news" ever seems to happen to anybody other than Catholics or members of the IRA. I am sure that you will of course have noticed this. So please try and print some "news" that paints a representative picture. Could I suggest that you read Tim Parry's fathers account of the events before during and after your pals blew him and other civilians accross a shopping centre as they shopped for Mothers day presents. Mr Parry talks in great detail about his visits to NI and the US in an attempt to understand how people like yourself can believe in the guff you put in here. As mentioned in here before Mark why not mail Mr Parry some of this "News". Please don't bother replying with why don't I mail AI and all the victims of the opressive British Goverments Facist forces. Read what I have said and you may just start to comprehend. Bruce | |||||
1304.13 | KERNEL::BARTHUR | Tue Dec 21 1993 09:39 | 10 | ||
Yeh yeh Mark, but you're a good example of one of them monkeys aren't you? You say nothing when it suits you, see nothing when it suits you and say only what suits your particular view point. You are a first class example of why peace is costing so much human misery in NI. Anyway, just so you don't miss the point as usual, we don't need graphic accounts of the horrors of NI, it isn't one sided and never has been. | |||||
1304.14 | NOVA::EASTLAND | Tue Dec 21 1993 14:59 | 6 | ||
re .11, as the report itself implies, collusion can exist at lower levels without it being a policy directive from above. The usual cheap, simplistic and unsubstantiated calumnies that you seem to think do some good for your cause. |