Government rejects probe into army shooting of 11 civilians in Ballymurphy

Posted By: April 29, 2014

Over three days in August 1971 eleven people were killed by British troops in the Ballymurphy area

By Niall McCracken. The Detail ( Belfast) 29 APRIL 2014

THE British Government has rejected calls for an independent probe into the deaths
of 11 civilians shot by British troops in Ballymurphy in August 1971.

In a letter sent to the families who were bereaved in the west Belfast shootings,
the Northern Ireland Secretary of State Theresa Villiers refused the calls on the
grounds that it would not be in the public interest.

In a statement the Ballymurphy relatives, who had pressed for an investigation by an
independent panel similar to that which examined the Hillsborough football tragedy,
said they were devastated by the decision:

“We, the Ballymurphy families, are shocked and outraged at the British Government’s
response, particularly in light of the support which has been rightly provided in
the Hillsborough case which includes supporting the legal costs of inquests.

“We have led our campaign for truth and justice in a dignified but determined manner
and deserve the opportunity to have the innocence of our loved ones proven.”

The families added: “Our legal representative, Padraig Ó Muirigh is considering a
judicial review against the decision by the British Secretary of State to refuse the
establishment of an Independent Panel.”

The relatives gathered together this morning to receive a letter confirming the
decision. In the letter the Secretary of State said “the balance of public interest
does not favour establishing an independent review”.

In a statement the Secretary of State added:“I would like to reiterate my deepest
sympathy and condolences for the families who were bereaved in August 1971. I am
aware that this decision is not the outcome the families had hoped for. Having met
them – and other families affected by other incidents throughout the Troubles – I
know that the passage of time does not ease the pain and hurt felt about the loss of
loved ones.

“I am willing to meet with the Ballymurphy families and their representatives again,
if they wish.”

In recent years the families have been campaigning for an inquiry similar to the
model used to examine the Hillsborough football disaster of 1989 which would review
all documents relating to the deaths of their loved ones.

In a previous interview as part of The Legacy series professor Phil Scraton, a key
architect of the Hillsborough Model, said he believed it could be used to examine
controversial killings from the Troubles.

An independent panel was appointed to look at the 96 deaths which occurred as a
result of a stadium crush during the 1989 FA Cup semi-final at Hillsborough stadium
in Sheffield.

In contrast, the Bloody Sunday Inquiry cost £191 million and following the
publication of Lord Saville’s report the Prime Minister, David Cameron, publicly
stated that there would be no more “open-ended and costly inquiries”.

But the panel model is seen as faster and more cost effective than other public
inquiries and, after it was successfully used in the Hillsborough tragedy, the
Ballymurphy families campaigned for a similar panel to be funded by the British and
Irish governments.

Earlier this year the Irish Government backed the families’ campaign and in March
the Taoiseach Enda Kenny raised the issue with Prime Minister Mr Cameron during a
meeting at Downing Street.

However the Secretary of State’s letter marks the British Government’s first public
confirmation that it would not help fund the panel.

“NOT IN THE PUBLIC INTEREST”

John Teggart describes eye witness accounts of how his father was shot in
Ballymurphy in August 1971 /
Over three days in August 1971 eleven people were killed by British troops in the
Ballymurphy and Springhill area in West Belfast. Ten of the victims were shot dead,
while another was wounded and died of a heart attack.

Eleven families lost loved ones and a total of 57 children were bereaved.

Mother of eight Joan Connolly was among the civilians shot dead by the Parachute
Regiment. Eyewitness accounts compiled by the families detail how she was shot in
the face when attempting to aid an already injured man.

Further accounts detail how local parish priest, Father Hugh Mullan, approached an
injured man waving a white baby grow and was fatally shot in the back when returning
to safety.

The events unfolded hours after the government introduced a policy of internment –
the controversial detention of paramilitary suspects without charge or trial.

At the time army officials claimed troops opened fire in response to shots from
republican paramilitaries – though this was rejected by the bereaved.

Families of the victims say the case raises serious questions over the human rights
record of the army in Northern Ireland.

Graphic accounts of the events in Ballymurphy have been recorded . Speaking to The
Detail before the Secretary of State’s decision was announced, John Teggart recalled
how his father was killed.

“One of the eyewitness accounts, that saw my father get shot, said his body bounced
with every bullet," he said.

“That’s 14 bullets passing through his body from a distance of 50 yards across the
road.

“I was 11 years of age at the time and we have been campaigning ever since."

A number of investigations into the event have proved unsatisfactory for the
bereaved families and they have taken their campaign for an independent
investigation to Europe.

Legal representatives of the Ballymurphy families have openly questioned the fitness
of the Historical Enquiries Team (HET), after the UK’s top policing watchdog, Her
Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary, found it had serious shortcomings. It said
the way the HET reviews deaths caused by soldiers was not sufficiently independent.

The shootings in Ballymurphy took place six months before Bloody Sunday in Derry
where thirteen people were shot dead when British paratroopers opened fire on crowds
at a civil rights demonstration.

In November 2011 the Ballymurphy families welcomed the Attorney General’s decision
to re-open inquests into the deaths but raised concerns about the limitations of an
inquest to investigate “the context, circumstances and aftermath”.

In June 2012, the former Northern Ireland secretary of State, Owen Paterson, turned
down the campaigners’ request for a full public inquiry inquiry saying it was “not
in the public interest”.

Today Ms Villiers repeated this position and said she did not believe a
Hillsborough-style review would “provide answers which are not already in the public
domain or covered by existing legal processes”.

In recent years families have been lobbying both the British and Irish governments
for the appointment of an independent panel to instead examine all documents
relating to the deaths of their loved ones.

Its focus would include the investigation of the role of the British Government,
British Army, criminal justice agencies such as the RUC, the Coroner’s Office and
the significance of the media.

In a previous article as part of The Legacy series, The Detail interviewed Queen’s
University professor Phil Scraton who was a prominent member of the panel tasked
with looking at the circumstances and aftermath of the Hillsborough disaster.

Professor Scraton believes killings from the Troubles could be investigated using
the same model of inquiry and he is one of the proposed members of the seven member
Ballymurphy panel put forward by campaigners. Other proposed members include civil
rights lawyer Gareth Pierce and former police ombudsman Nuala O’Loan as chair.

© The Detail 2014