On Tuesday, the results of the long, $300 million investigation into the Bloody Sunday killings in Northern Ireland
were
published.
The inquiry, led by Lord Saville of Newdigate, found that thirteen
demonstrators--and a fourteenth, who later died of wounds--were
unlawfully killed by British paratroopers on January 30, 1972. In short,
Saville found that the shootings were neither provoked by the marchers
nor, as had previously been alleged, provoked by shootings from armed
nationalists. Saville also discounts the
theory that the attacks were "premeditated."
Will this report finally provide closure? If the debate running up to its release is any indication, probably not.
- 'Total Satisfaction' Impossible, argues Paul Bew
in The Telegraph. "This is why [Lord Saville] has been so meticulous in
his work in order to produce a massively detailed and complex report,
almost as a protective shield against the inevitable criticism he will
face." The pressing matter, he says, " lies in the ignored question:
what exactly does nationalist Ireland want by way of atonement for
Bloody Sunday?"
- Inquiry Needed to Replace Older Coverup "This has much to do with the evasions, condescension and
shoddiness of the 1972 Widgery report, whose attempt to defuse the
aftermath of the killings damaged the credibility of the British
government in Ireland as much as the actions of the Paras did," writes Roy Foster
at The Guardian. "Its sketchy and contradictory approach to evidence,
and the heavily biased way it presented the victims, have since been
forensically demonstrated; the idea of a cover-up at the time was
amplified by the suppression of the Sunday Times Insight team's report."
- Will the Soldiers Involved Be Prosecuted? That's the "crunch issue," writes Deaglán de Bréadún in The Irish Times.
- They
Shouldn't Be "How...would it serve the public interest to prosecute
former soldiers or politicians so long after the event," asks Paul Bew,
"not least when so many paramilitary killers were given early release
from prison as part of the Good Friday Agreement?" The Spectator's David Blackburn
is likewise against it, appalled that "the soldiers who beat both sets
of paramilitaries to the negotiating table will be branded as
criminals," and skeptical of the IRA's claims not to have provoked the
violence. Pundit Iain Dale notes that the UK has "released hundreds of IRA terrorists, many guilty of the most appalling atrocities." Meanwhile, Jenny McCartney, in The Telegraph, points out that
In
the course of his highly selective evidence to the Inquiry, Martin
McGuinness admitted that the IRA had snipers in Derry capable of
picking off British soldiers that day, though he says they did not
fire. He also said he was second-in-command of the Derry IRA on Bloody
Sunday, and officer commanding two weeks later. In that position, he
regularly authorised cold-blooded murders: for example, when Noor Baz
Khan, a 45-year-old caterer and father of five who served tea to the
British Army, was shot dead by the Derry IRA in 1973, it would have
been with McGuinness's approval. He is now deputy first minister of
Northern Ireland, and a regular visitor to the White House. That is
something worth remembering, as the world ponders the appropriate
consequences for "unlawful killing" in the Derry of the 1970s.
- I Was There--and No, They Shouldn't Be General Sir Michael Rose,
writing in The Daily Mail, is "absolutely certain" members of the IRA
were firing first on the day of the killings. He finds it "ironic that
the soldiers who brought peace to Northern Ireland are likely to be
treated as criminals as a result of this inquiry, while former
terrorists such as McGuinness and Adams--who did everything to prevent
peace--are feted in their roles as ministers." He also worries about
"the effect of the Saville Inquiry on the British soldiers fighting
today in Afghanistan."
- It's Called the Rule of Law: Yes, They Absolutely Should Be Laurence White provides a rebuttal in The Belfast Telegraph.
There is no point in saying that the IRA or the UDA or any other
terrorist organisation killed far more people and that atrocities such
as happened at Omagh, Dublin, Droppin' Well, La Mon, Enniskillen etc
etc were as bad or worse and why was there not an inquiry into them.
Firstly every right thinking person accepts that those atrocities were
vile and that anyone involved in causing those outrages should be
brought to justice and jailed for a very, very long time. There is no
need for inquiries into those events because everyone accepts that
terrorists engage in terrorism... Bloody Sunday was completely
different. Those who opened fire were legitimately in possession of
weapons. They also had to follow rules. They were helping to impose law
and order. And they were subject to the law.
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