Ballymurphy families to meet NI Secretary

Published Thursday, 17 June 2010
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Families of 11 people killed in west Belfast, by the same parachute regiment involved in Bloody Sunday six months later, are to meet the Northern Ireland Secretary.

Owen Paterson will hold talks with relatives who also want an inquiry into the shooting dead of their loved ones in Ballymurphy, following Lord Mark Saville's report into the killings in Londonderry.

The Ballymurphy killings in August 1971 took place during the Army's Operation Demetrius - the arrest of those who would be interned on suspicion of involvement in paramilitary activity.

The troops later claimed they opened fire after being shot at by republicans.

Victims included Catholic priest Father Hugh Mullan and mother-of-eight Joan Connolly - her daughter Briege Voyle said at a press conference on Thursday: "Bloody Sunday could have been avoided if the authorities had looked in to what happened in Ballymurphy."

As the relatives called for an international independent investigation, Sinn Fein President Gerry Adams described the events in Ballymurphy as "another striking example of the brutality with which the paras acted and how the British system then connived in a cover-up."

He added: "The British government in acknowledging the wrong done in Derry must acknowledge the wrong done in Ballymurphy and elsewhere and to these families. It must make a public apology for what it and its armed forces did."

Government sources have indicated a meeting will go ahead.

© UTV News
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32 Comments
Mike Monahan in England wrote (694 days ago):
The past has to be buried along with the dead! Negative comments about the dead are a non- starter. All Ulster people are victims of the troubles! Families should live and have a life!
Ulysses32 in Belfast wrote (701 days ago):
Ah, Marc showing his compassion again for innocent victims. So there really is a two-tier system for victims then with FAIR's (sic) opinion being the most important. You really do come up with some rancid comments, Marc.
Marc in Lisburn wrote (701 days ago):
@Kirsty Connolly. Yes and I am certain the family of Jean McConville feel the hurt and pain of their innocent loved ones murder! I am sure they, like all the IRAs victims would also like justice! Not really justice to see an IRA man as deputy first minister though! Is it?
Michael in Belfast wrote (702 days ago):
tevie wrote - kirsty dont let the bigots here get you down, they think every catholic is a terrorist.these people cannot seem to distinguish between UNARMED CIVILIANS and ARMED COMBATANTS. keep up the good work you're doing and the truth will come out just like bloody sunday. - So all the innocent people killed by money given to the IRA by the South and the Americans were armed combatants then. Wise up man. Your comments themselves are inflammatory. As for Kirtsy what Maggie said is true, we do point the finger at each other and it was our own fault. If the army hadn't have cvome when they did where we would be. It was Catholics who prayed on their knees for them becuase they were being burnt out. And now look at where that got them. As for Deaglan - I am a Unionist and have Catholics in my family so to tarnish us all with your comments about seeing Catholics as second class is complete rubbish. Grow up. Its time we all moved on and stopped this.
stevie in belfast wrote (702 days ago):
kirsty dont let the bigots here get you down, they think every catholic is a terrorist.these people cannot seem to distinguish between UNARMED CIVILIANS and ARMED COMBATANTS. keep up the good work you're doing and the truth will come out just like bloody sunday.
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