Sinn Féin MLA Gerry Kelly has said that a report in the Sunday Business Post
alleging that one of two men who exposed the whereabouts of British agent
Denis Donaldson was a former Special Branch officer raised serious questions
for the PSNI.
"We are told that the man who led Sunday World journalist Hugh Jordan to
Denis Donaldson's home in Donegal and who secretly filmed him was a former
member of the RUC, Colin Breen. Shortly after the Sunday World exposé Denis
Donaldson was killed," said Kelly.
"Given the role played by Special Branch in Denis Donaldson's life over many
years, the revelation of the involvement of Colin Breen in this story is
extremely sinister. It is clear that the PSNI Special Branch now have
serious questions to answer about their role in publicising Denis
Donaldson's whereabouts," said Kelly.
According to the Sunday Business Post, the former officer, Colin Breen had
worked in Tennent Street RUC barracks in Belfast before his retirement.
Breen travelled with the Sunday World journalist to the Glenties area of
County Donegal to track Donaldson down.
Breen, who is believed to have close ties to Special Branch, is not a member
of the Sunday World's staff and photographers employed by the newspaper were
not used. The journalist Hugh Jordan described how he had searched for
Donaldson in Donegal but made no mention of Breen's role.
Breen secretly filmed Donaldson outside his remote cottage five miles from
Glenties. The Sunday World printed photographs and video film was sold to a
number of British television stations and broadcast. The public had been
unaware of Donaldson's location prior to the media reports. Within days of
the coverage Donaldson was killed.
The timing of the killing, just two days before the British and Irish
governments unveiled their plans, has been seen by many as a deliberate
attempt to thwart the political process.
In 2002 Donaldson was used by Special Branch to collapse the democratically
elected power-sharing executive amidst spurious allegations of a republican
'spy ring'. Special Branch exposed Donaldson as a British agent last year in
a further attempt to destabilise the peace process.
This is not the first time Hugh Jordan has been the media conduit for
Special Branch's dirty war. In the late 1990s a former Special Branch agent,
Thomas Douglas who worked as part of a black propaganda group, claimed he
had fed Jordan fabricated stories designed to undermine the IRA cessation at
that time.
It's not the first time that an agent, apparently considered more useful
dead than alive, has been killed. William Stobie, a Special Branch agent who
supplied and later disposed of weaponry used in the murder of Pat Finucane,
was shot dead after he backed the call for a public inquiry and appeared
willing to co operate with the Steven's probe.
In a statement issued shortly before the funeral, the Donaldson family
blamed the "activities of Special Branch" for their "difficult situation".
"The difficult situation which our family has been put in is the direct
result of the activities of the Special Branch and British Intelligence
agencies," said the family.
The family acknowledged "the speedy statement from the IRA disassociating
themselves from this murder. We believe that statement to be true". The
family also urged "those politicians and media commentators who have sought
to use this tragedy to score cheap political points to stop doing so."
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