Shooting: Attempt to stop emergence of collusion evidence
Murder bid aimed to silence British agent
Following the shooting of leading loyalist and suspected British agent Mark
Haddock, Sinn Féin spokesperson on Justice issues Gerry Kelly said that many
would be suspicious of the motivation behind the shooting given the fact
that the Six County Ombudsman's inquiry into Haddock, the Mount Vernon UVF
and their collusion with the Special Branch was due to be published next
month.
"Mark Haddock was for many years a leading figure in the UVF in Mount
Vernon, a grouping associated with many sectarian killings. It is also
widely accepted that Haddock and others within the UVF in Mount Vernon were
also working for the Special Branch for many years throughout this entire
period", Kelly said on Tuesday evening.
"An inquiry into collusion between the Mount Vernon UVF and the Special
Branch is currently being conducted by the Police Ombudsman and is due to be
published next month. Mark Haddock is at the centre of this inquiry. Given
this, many people will be rightly suspicious of both the timing and the
motivation behind this shooting", he said.
"There is a clear pattern of former British Agents being killed in
circumstances like this just as allegations of collusion or other activities
are about to be exposed, as was the case of those involved in the murder of
Pat Finucane", said Kelly.
Gerry Kelly later said Tuesday's murder bid again raised serious questions
about who actually controlled the loyalist death squads. He said it was
widely accepted that Haddock was controlled and directed by the Special
Branch throughout the period in which he was engaged in killings with the
full knowledge of his handlers.
"The attempt to kill Haddock follows a long standing pattern. Billy Stobie,
another Special Branch agent and a man involved in the murder of Pat
Finucane died in similar circumstances", he said.
"Many will believe that last night's attempt to murder Mark Haddock was an
attempt to silence him and help prevent further allegations of widespread
and systematic collusion between the Special Branch and the loyalist death
squads emerging. Those members of the Special Branch who handled Mark
Haddock would have much to gain from his death. This reality raises serious
questions about who controls these gangs and who controlled the loyalist
gang involved in yesterday evening's murder bid", Kelly said.
Last week in a BBC Spotlight television documentary, a former RUC officer
revealed how RUC agents within the UVF in Belfast's Mount Vernon area had
carried out sectarian murders and were being protected by Special Branch.
The BBC revelations by former RUC member Trevor McIlwrath, coupled with the
release and relocation of loyalist Ken Barett, the killer of Belfast
soliocitor Pat Finucane, drew further attention to made a clear agenda not
just to protect unionist paramilitaries working for the British State but
more significantly those handling them in the ranks of the Special Branch
and MI5.
Human rights report
In April, An Phoblacht reported that a former north Belfast UVF leader, now
widely reported as being Mark Haddock, was involved in more than a dozen
murders while he was an agent for RUC Special Branch and that a report due
to be completed by Ombudsman Nuala O'Loan was set to expose the role of
Special Branch in these murders.
The probe followed a detailed report, Getting Away With Murder, by human
rights group British Irish Rights Watch (BIRW). Information contained in the
report has been described as "compelling".
The serious nature of the evidence collated by BIRW alarmed human rights
groups so much that as well as sending a report to the Ombudsman, the group
also sent copies to the so-called Independent Monitoring Commission, British
Secretary of State Peter Hain, US Special Envoy Mitchell Reiss and the US
Congress.
Former RUC detective Johnston Brown, who ran the UVF agent prior to being
ordered to hand him over to Special Branch told the media, "of course there
were elements within Special Branch who knew what he was doing but they
chose to ignore it."
Victims
The UVF victims include 27-year-old Sharon McKenna a Catholic taxi driver
who was shot dead by the UVF while visiting a Protestant pensioner in North
Belfast in 1993; two Catholic workmen from County Armagh, Gary Convie and
Eamon Fox, shot dead while working on a building site in Tigers Bay in 1994;
Thomas Sheppard, shot dead in 1996; Rev David Templeton who died following a
severe beating in March 1997; Billy Harbinson beaten to death in May 1997;
Raymond McCord jnr beaten to death in November 1997; and David Greer and
Tommy English both shot dead in October 2000.
Last December, after it emerged that the UVF killer of Sean McParland in
Skegoniel 1994 was a longstanding Special Branch agent, Sinn Féin's Gerry
Kelly called on the Six County Police Ombudsman's office to investigate
allegations of collusion between PSNI Special Branch and unionist
paramilitaries in Mount Vernon.
Two week's later it emerged that the man who drove away the UVF killers of
Sharon McKenna was protected from arrest by his Special Branch handlers.
McKenna's murderer was also a Special Branch informant, involved in over a
dozen killings. His Special Branch handlers repeatedly blocked RUC attempts
to arrest him in the weeks following the murder.
A source with intimate knowledge of the case said if the RUC had questioned
him, the killing would already be solved. "The Special Branch protected him
from arrest because they knew he would crack under questioning."
The Branchman running the informer retired two years ago.
The McKenna family have campaigned to have the killers brought to trial.
In February, Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams held talks with Raymond McCord
senior. Adams pledged to raise the case with the British Prime Minister Tony
Blair and Taoiseach Bertie Ahern. "I think the McCord family have the right
to the truth and that is essentially what Raymond McCord is looking for -
the truth about the murder of his son. I think there is huge evidence to
suggest that British agents were involved in that killing", he said.
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