Sunday Business Post, January 25, 2004
Who is going to police the secret armies in the North?
- by Tom McGurk , 25.1.2004 -
Thankfully, apart from continuing political chaos there is still a
postpeace-process good feeling factor in the North.
There are jobs, the economy grows, Belfast changes daily under the
developers' cranes.
Thankfully, our morning radio bulletins of slaughter and mayhem seem to be
gone forever. Even the seemingly once impossible the winding-up of the
republican paramilitary wing is ongoing; and now even the DUP are in the
process of discovering what the real political world is composed of, as
opposed to the imaginary one of unionist majoritarianism.
But for those whose relatives were murdered, those old terrible days seem
frozen in time. Being the victim of paramilitary killers is one thing - but
when the suspicion will not go away that the hidden hand of some agency or
other of the state was involved, the agony deepens.
It's not only that those charged with protecting the lives of citizens may
have been responsible, but they may still be out there, promoted and still
serving the state. If the state is to dispense justice, what are we to do
when the state itself is the author of injustice?
The murder of Bellaghy man Sean Browne in May 1997 has resurfaced last week
with police ombudsman Nuala O'Loan's report. Her conclusions could hardly
have been more damning.
There was "no earnest effort" by the police officers involved to solve the
crime, and now files critical to an investigation of their modus operandi
have gone missing from police records. According to one source in the
inquiry, the police effort deserved "two out of ten", and apparently there
are other cases, other "unexploded mines waiting to go off".
So not only are there unanswered questions hanging over why the murder was
so badly investigated, but seemingly at a much later stage another criminal
act was perpetrated to remove the files and thereby the evidence of earlier
failures.
Ask the dogs on the streets of Bellaghy at the moment to sum it all up, and
you will be given the explanation that the loyalist gang who carried out the
killing were directed by elements within the security forces and operated in
the belief that their tracks would never be uncovered.
Of course, there may be other explanations but would someone looking at the
O'Loan Report this week be unreasonable to conclude that here we had
loyalist killers being used as proxy weapons by elements within the state?
To all of this must be added the particular circumstances of Brown's murder.
Had he been in any way political, a wellknown Sinn Féin supporter, for
example, its rationale could be seen as loyalist titfor-tat.
Indeed, in that immediate area, over the previous decade, nearly a dozen
people with suspected links to Sinn Féin and the IRA were murdered by
loyalist gangs.
But Brown was not political, and was not involved in any way that could -
even within thegrim logic of theNorth's paramilitary war - justify his
targeting. He was, in fact, simply a pillar of the Bellaghy community, an
immensely popular man with all sides of the sectarian divide; his passion
was not politics but Gaelic football.
Under his leadership the local Bellaghy WolfeTone club had become the
virtual re creational c entre of the community, its top-class facilities
were the envy of larger communities, and both sexes and all ages used them.
Quite simply, the community was largely the Wolfe Tone GAA facilities, and
they were an expression of its pride and its achievement.Therefore, to kill
Brown was an attempt to destroy that community.
The savage irony was that he was brutally murdered not because of who he
was, but because of what he did. And what he did was to spend a lifetime in
the selfless service of his community.
Iremember one Sunday afternoon visiting Bellaghy, and one couldn't help
being struck by the sights at the Bellaghy club.
Hundreds of boys and girls were coming and going in their tracksuits, the
hall was full of families, the car park was filled with expensive cars and
the sense of the vibrancy and self-confidence of these people was everywhere.
Here, despite the long and terrible years of the troubles, was a community
rising on the economic and cultural tides, self-made and self-possessed.
Here, too, was a new young nationalist community, well-educated, financially
self-confident and no longer in any sense either dispossessed or
second-class citizens.
In these circumstances, then, the attack on Brown was not about this
community's political aspirations but about its economic and cultural
achievements. The hands of his killers were not so much concerned with
security considerations but with ethnic ones. If then there is a linkage
into a hidden state hand in this case, what does it say? That within the
agencies of state there are people not only concerned with fighting a secret
war against those they perceive to be subversive but as in this case
mounting a secret dirty war against an entire community because of who they
are and what they are achieving?
In this sense, the murder of Browne ratchets up the deepening shadows around
the state/loyalist paramilitary linkage.
In the Dáil this week we witnessed the terrible 30-year-old unmitigated
distress that the Dublin/Monaghan bombings still cause. This week, too, the
Finucane family sought more legal steps in trying to open the Stevens
Report. The Rose Mallon case in Tyrone, from 15 years ago, has also
surfaced. All of these cases and many others continually point to the deeply
disturbing vista of state involvement, however it came about.
I am sure that in the weeks ahead of the Good Friday Review we will be
treated to the familiar sight of Tony Blair telling various parts of our
local politics to get their house in order. To operate above board, in
visible democratic fashion, as he puts it.
Is it not time that he too was asked to open his secret books, to reveal all
the myriad wings of his organisation, to put all his agencies on the table?
Who was it that said: "We can't have democrats and secret armies at the same
time"?