Léargas By Gerry Adams
Sunday, November 10, 2013
The past cannot be an obstacle to the
future
Friday - November 8th
was the anniversary of the 1987 Enniskillen bomb attack in which 11 people were
killed in an IRA bomb attack. Just before I left Belfast to travel to the USA I
was interviewed for a documentary on the Ballymurphy Massacre in August 1971 in
which 11 people were killed by the British Parachute Regiment.
Last week also saw
the broadcasting of the Disappeared and details emerged of British Army tapes
which may have filmed the sectarian killing by the UVF of 76 year old Roseanne
Mallon in county Tyrone in May 1994. The inquest into Roseanne Mallon’s death
is one of 29 which have been deliberately delayed for decades.
There were also the
anniversaries of the Shankill Bomb and the Greysteel Massacre and other
killings. The Pat Finucane Centre’s case worker Anne Cadwallader published her
book, ‘Lethal Allies: British State Collusion in Ireland’ which details the
involvement of British state forces operating in collusion in the murder of
approximately 120 citizens in the 1970s. And there are many more families who
have lost loved ones in other violent actions seeking truth.
The pain, the
suffering and the tragedies from decades of conflict are, for many, as real
today as they were, when they first occurred. Each occasion of
anniversary evokes painful memories. And each such occasion is a reminder of
the need to address the past as part of the work of building a peaceful future.
Almost 4000 people
died and countless others were injured in a war that was vicious and brutal.
Over the years I have
attended many wakes and funerals of family members, friends and neighbours. I
have met many victims, including victims of the IRA, and among them the
families of those secretly buried by that organisation. Their story is one of
the great tragedies of the conflict. What happened was wrong and unjustifiable.
The IRA acknowledged this and apologised.
The grief of all of
the victims of the conflict must be respected and acknowledged and all of us in
political leadership have a responsibility to do all that we can to ensure that
no future generation suffers the pain of war.
Regrettably, there
are some in the political system and in sections of the media who see the issue
of the past as an opportunity to attack Sinn Féin or more particularly me. An
example of this occurred in the Dáil last Tuesday. A Fianna Fail TD Brendan
Smith, speaking on the issue of those secretly buried by the IRA, that: “The
IRA still refuse to accept responsibility for the murders and legitimate
questions are not answered by Gerry Adams and others.”
None of this is true.
The Fianna Fail leader Micheál Martin knows this. He was a senior member of the
government which established the Commission for the Location of Victims Remains
at my request.
As a republican
leader I have never shirked my responsibility on this issue. It was following
representations by me that the IRA established a special unit in the autumn of
1997 to ascertain the whereabouts of the graves of a number of people executed
and buried by it in the 1970’s. I have met the families of those affected by
this. I have worked with the Commission and I will continue to do so. It has
done tremendous work.
I participated in the
programme to raise awareness and assist the search for the remaining bodies.
That has been my focus for many years and I intend to honour the commitment I
gave to the families to continue with my efforts.
The special forensics
team, working to the Independent Commission for the Location of Victims
Remains, was established as a result of a proposal from Father Alec Reid and
myself.
The forensic science
consultant Geoff Knupfer, who leads the forensic team for the Commission,
acknowledged several years ago the co-operation they received from the IRA. He
said: "In a spirit of co-operation and reconciliation they [the IRA]
are trying to help in every way they can. I am absolutely convinced that they
are doing everything they can to assist. The support we have had from them has
been absolutely 100 per cent from day one."
As a result of the
work of the last 12 years nine bodies have been recovered and the sites of four
of the six remaining bodies have been identified. The failure thus far to find
the remaining bodies is not due to any lack of resolve or cooperation by
me or other republicans.
Ranting about me is
easy for those who rely on gossip, smear, their own imagination and the
accusations of political enemies, but it will not help the families. Nor will
resolving this injustice and recovering the bodies be assisted by political
point scoring, felon setting or snide ill-informed newspaper articles. What is
needed is information.
I therefore appeal
again for anyone with any information, including anyone who was previously in
touch with the Commission to contact them again on the basis of absolute
confidentiality, in order to assist the Commission in reassessing the
information available to it.
Any information
passed to the Commission cannot be used in a court of law or transmitted to any
other agency and those passing on this information have absolute immunity in
relation to this information.
Unfortunately the
issue of the past, and of truth and reconciliation has not made the progress it
should have since the Good Friday Agreement was achieved.
Sinn Féin has
proposed an independent international based process to deal with the past including
all these issues. The fact is that none of the participants to the conflict can
be responsible for creating such a process. However, thus far the British
government refuses to agree on any mechanism that can deal with this issue and
the Irish government and others have made no real effort to establish a viable
truth recovery process. This is not acceptable.
The past cannot be an
obstacle to dealing with the present or a pretext for refusing to build a new
future of equality, fairness and prosperity for everyone. And while republicans
recognise the complexity and difficulties which confront us all in dealing with
this issue we are in no way daunted by it. Nor should anyone be.
It is necessary that
in coming to the issue of truth and reconciliation that we all recognise that
there are many different narratives to this story. We live in a divided and
largely segregated society with different, and, in some instances,
contradictory and opposite political allegiances. Little wonder that there are
different perspectives on the causes of the conflict, what happened and
who was responsible.
The role and actions
of all combatant organisations must be fully considered, including government,
state agencies and the legal and judicial system.
And paramount in all
of this must be the views of the victims and survivors. Their voices must be
heard and respected, not simply the loudest voices, not simply those on any
particular side or those on no side. All victims must be treated on an equal
basis. The views of the many thousand victims and survivors who have remained
silent must also be heard.
So despite the
personalised attacks on me Sinn Fein will not be deflected from
campaigning for a truth and reconciliation process that can bring closure
for families bereaved by the cruelty of war.
Sinn Féin Mountmellick – Serving The Community
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