by Sinn Féin's Gerry Adams
Thursday, December 5, 2013
The Smithwick Inquiry Report
Eight years after it
was established the report of the Smithwick Tribunal was finally published on
Tuesday evening.
I want to commend
Justice Smithwick for his hard work of many years. I am very mindful that at
the heart of the Smithwick Inquiry there are two bereaved families and I hope
the report helps bring some measure of closure for them.
I also want to
commend the Irish government for fulfilling its obligation under the Weston
Park Agreement. The onus is now on the British government to move speedily to
holding the promised inquiry into the murder of human rights lawyer Pat
Finucane.
The Smithwick
Tribunal was established as a result of an agreement in the negotiations in
Weston Park in 2001 between the British and Irish governments.
Canadian Judge Peter
Cory was asked to look at the killing of Pat Finucane; Robert Hamill; Rosemary
Nelson; Billy Wright; Judge Gibson and his wife; and RUC Chief Superintendent
Harry Breen and RUC Superintendent Robert Buchanan.
Cory worked
diligently and in 2003 he handed his reports over to the two governments. The
Canadian Judge concluded that there was no basis for an inquiry into the deaths
of the Gibsons. He proposed that there was a basis for inquiries into all of
the others, including the killing of the two RUC officers.
The Irish government
published Cory’s recommendations in December 2003 and announced that it would
set up an inquiry, but the British stalled until April 2004 before publishing
his reports to them.
Ten years later of
the six cases investigated by Judge Cory only the Pat Finucane Inquiry has yet
to commence. It is clear that the British government is deeply worried by the
enormous political implications of the Finucane case which is known to involve
substantial institutional collusion between British state forces and the UDA.
This concern was
evident in the introduction by the British government in June 2005 of the Inquiries Act 2005. This legislation deliberately limits the scope of the
inquiries proposed by Cory who criticised the British move saying it "...would
make a meaningful inquiry impossible."
In June 2006 I met
with Justice Smithwick at his request. He asked if I could help. I explained to
him that in 2005 the IRA put its weapons beyond use and stood down its
structures. The IRA had left the stage. However, after some effort three former
IRA volunteers agreed to give evidence to the Tribunal.
A process was put in
place to facilitate this. When this was achieved Sinn Féin stepped back and the
process moved forward. This was a significant and unprecedented development.
For the first time former members of the IRA gave evidence to an inquiry into
an IRA action. Clearly this would not have been possible if the Tribunal had
not created the context to allow it.
The decision by three
former members of the IRA to voluntarily give evidence to the Smithwick
Tribunal was an important development. This was the first time former members
of the IRA have ever given evidence to an inquiry into an IRA action. The
engagement between the three former volunteers and Smithwick is historically
unparalleled.
Justice Smithwick
accepts much of the evidence given by the former IRA volunteers, for example
describing their witness account as a ‘valuable resource for the Tribunal.’ At
other points in his report he acknowledges that their evidence in respect of
the movement of the RUC car is ‘fully consistent’ with information logged in
the journal of RUC Superintendent Bob Buchanan.
Justice Smithwick’s
conclusion is contradictory. On the one hand he concludes that the Tribunal ‘has
not uncovered direct evidence of collusion’.
But then, in a clear
contradiction of this and on the basis of circumstantial and untested
intelligence Justice Smithwick then goes on to say that ‘on balance
of probability’ some form of collusion occurred.
What Justice
Smithwick defines as collusion is very different in form and scale from the
collusion that occurred in the north. During 30 years of war the British state
was responsible for structured, institutionalised and co-ordinated state run
collusion and unionist death squads which led to the deaths of hundreds of
citizens, including those killed in the Dublin and Monaghan and Dundalk bomb
attacks.
The British
government arrogantly disregards the unanimous all-party Oireachtas motion
calling on it to provide vital information about these bomb attacks. The Pat
Finucane Inquiry is now the only inquiry agreed to at Weston Park that has not
been held. The British government is in clear breach of its commitments.
The Irish government
now needs to assertively lobby the British government, including at an
international level, to honour its commitment and to set up the promised public
inquiry into the murder of Pat Finucane.
Sinn Féin supported
these inquires on the basis that families had the right to full disclosure of
all relevant information. Sinn Féin believes that there needs to be an
effective truth process for dealing with all legacy issues.
We have repeatedly
called on the British and Irish governments to invite in a reputable and
independent international body to establish an Independent International Truth
Commission which would be independent of any state, combatant groups, political
parties, civil society and economic interests and would have a remit to inquire
into the extent and pattern of the conflict as well as their causes and
consequences.
I helped to
facilitate the engagement between the former IRA volunteers and the Smithwick
Tribunal because I believe there is a responsibility to assist families
bereaved in the conflict, though this may not be possible in all cases.
Republicans are very
conscious of the hurt and suffering which has been caused through conflict in
our country. Sinn Féin has repeatedly called on the British and Irish
governments to invite in a reputable and independent international body to
establish an Independent International Truth Commission which would be
independent of any state, combatant groups, political parties, civil society
and economic interests.
It should have a
remit to inquire into the extent and pattern of past violations as well as
their causes and consequences and would be dependent on the full co-operation
of all the relevant parties.
Sinn Féin Mountmellick – Serving The
Community
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