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Sinn Fein endorse Police Service of Northern Ireland and MI5
operations
By Steve James
7 February 2007
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Sinn Feins special convention on January 28 gave its
backing to the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) and the
Northern Ireland criminal justice system.
The 900 or so delegates and 2,000 observers voted by 95 percent
to participate in local policing structures in the interests
of justice, and mandated the appointment of Sinn Fein representatives
to the Northern Ireland Policing Board and District Policing Boards.
The decision, opposed only by Sinn Feins youth wing with
a mere 20 votes, gives the Sinn Fein executive the right to participate
in the Norths policing structures without further reference
to the partys membership. It follows a campaign by the leadership
of the benefits of a Sinn Fein Minister of Justice, with control
over the PSNI.
It means that the last obstacle, on the nationalist side, to
reviving power-sharing in Northern Ireland between the nationalist
Sinn Fein and the pro-British Democratic Unionist Party (DUP),
has been removed.
The votes significance was immediately grasped on both
sides of the Atlantic as it removes the last vestige of equivocation
over Sinn Feins support for the Northern Ireland capitalist
state.
The London Times noted, Irish republicans have
served notice that they will work with British sovereignty in
Ulster for what they obviously hope will only be a transitional
period but which could and should last for many years to come.
Outgoing US Special Envoy to Northern Ireland Mitchell Reiss commended
the leadership of Gerry Adams and called for the full implementation
of the St. Andrews Agreement, designed to restore power sharing.
Reiss also demanded that unionists support the new agreement.
Further endorsement of Sinn Fein from top police and intelligence
echelons came from the so-called Independent Monitoring Commission
(IMC), whose members include a former CIA deputy director and
a former deputy director of the Metropolitan Police.
The IMC stressed that, following its decision to disarm, the
IRA has ceased all training, intelligence gathering and disbanded
its paramilitary structures. We are clear that the leadership
of Sinn Fein and the republican movement as a whole remains firm
in its commitment to the political strategy and continues to give
appropriate instructions to the membership of the movement.
British Prime Minister Tony Blair, with Irelands Taoiseach
Bertie Ahern in tow, promptly announced that new elections for
the Stormont Assembly would be held on March 7 for the explicit
purposes of endorsing the St. Andrews agreement and of electing
the assembly that will form a power-sharing executive on March
26.
The Northern Ireland Assembly set up as part of the Good Friday
Agreement of 1998, which set out to end the longstanding war in
the North by bringing Sinn Fein and the IRA into the framework
of capitalist rule, has been suspended since 2002.
Following the suspension, the British government placed maximum
pressure on Sinn Fein, partly in response to DUP demands, to abandon
all extra-parliamentary activity.
In 2005, the murder of Catholic Robert McCartney and the raid
on Belfasts Northern Bank were utilised to press Sinn Fein
towards its decision later that year to disarm the IRA and suspend
all its activities. Nevertheless, subsequent efforts to revive
the assembly have stumbled over Sinn Feins reservations
over supporting the PSNIthe partially reformed replacement
for the notorious Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC), which played
such a key role in British imperialisms occupation of the
North. The PSNI is formally committed to recruiting as many Catholics
as Protestants.
In the St. Andrews Agreement of October 2006, orchestrated
by Blair and the US government, a framework was established to
finally bring Sinn Fein and the DUP together. The new agreement
set out a timetable for elections, pledged human rights and equality
legislation, along with promises of a cash bonus in the form of
a spending review. In return, local control of the PSNI should
be agreed, with the intention of this being implemented by 2008.
As a further sweetener to former IRA activists, the government
abolished the Assets Recovery Agency. Commentators noted that
this would undoubtedly assist the Sinn Fein leadership in convincing
former IRA unitsparticularly in border areas of South Armagh,
where a lot of money has been made from smugglingof the
correctness of their policy.
In the weeks leading up to the Sinn Fein vote, two events revealed
the real character of the Northern Ireland state to which Sinn
Fein is now wedded.
The first was the publication of a report by Northern Irelands
Police Ombudsman Nuala OLoan. The Ombudsman role was established
along with the Good Friday Agreement, with the intention of establishing
some level of public confidence in the police complaints system.
In 2003, OLoan was asked by Raymond McCord to investigate
complaints surrounding the circumstances in which his son, also
Raymond McCord, had been killed.
OLoans report was devastating. It revealed that
in one corner of North Belfast and Newtonabbey serious evidence
existed to link at least 10 murders, 10 attempted murders and
a host of other criminal activities to an informant of the RUC
Special Branch. Both Catholics and Protestants were targeted.
Called Informant 1 in OLoans report, Mark
Haddock, a known member of the paramilitary Ulster Volunteer Force,
was named in the Irish parliament by Labour Party leader Pat Rabitte.
Between 1991 and as late as 2003, alongside his murderous activities,
Haddock is alleged to have provided hundreds of pieces of information
to Special Branch. In return, and as part of a sustained effort
to control a loyalist paramilitary Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF)
unit, Haddock received around £80,000, was repeatedly given
assistance by Special Branch to keep him out of jail, allowed
to keep a handgun, and assisted in his effort to remove rivals
in the local drug trade.
As a consequence of the practices of Special Branch,
notes OLoan, the UVF particularly, in North Belfast
and Newtonabbey were consolidated and strengthened.
It can be assumed that such Special Branch practices covered
every area of Northern Ireland. OLoan notes that as a result
of her report, 24 percent of police informants have been discharged,
either as criminals or for not providing any information. OLoan
did not comment on the corollary to thisthat 76 percent
of informants remain active.
In another significant development, Annex E of the St. Andrews
Agreement also allowed for MI5 to take overall charge of national
security arrangements in Northern Ireland, while continuing to
run agents, in close collaboration with the PSNI.
MI5, the internal arm of the British intelligence services,
has long played a bloody role in Northern Ireland. Throughout
the dirty war, MI5s agents and informants were at some level
implicated in a number of the most notorious incidents, including
the Kincora Boys Home scandal, the murder of civil rights lawyer
Pat Finucane, the killing of Francis Notarantonio and the Omagh
bombing, to name but a few.
Although there was much inter-agency feuding, MI5 had close
working relations with RUC Special Branch, the British Armys
covert units, such as the Force Research Unit, and had a high
level of insight and control over the conduct and trajectory of
Britains counterinsurgency operations.
In recent years, the multiple murderer and deputy head of the
IRAs internal security, Freddie Scappaticci, was exposed
as an MI5 agent, as was the IRAs leading international and
US contact Denis Donaldson. No serious commentator on Irish politics
considers that the full extent of MI5 infiltration of all paramilitary
groups, including the top levels of the IRA, has yet been fully
exposed.
MI5 has repeatedly put every obstacle in the path of investigators
and lawyers trying to unearth the truth, for example, of the events
of Bloody Sunday, January 30, 1972, when 13 civil rights demonstrators
were shot dead by the British Army.
Recently allegations have emerged that loyalist killer Torrens
Knight was an MI5 agent. Knight was one of a squad of Ulster Defence
Association gunmen responsible for the deaths of eight Protestants
and Catholics in Greysteel in 1993.
While the British Army watchtowers and fortresses have largely
been dismantled, a new headquarters is being built for MI5 in
Palace Barracks, outside Belfast. According the Sunday Tribune,
reports indicate that MI5 is actively recruiting members of the
former RUC Special Branch disgraced in the OLoan report.
Of MI5s UK-wide budget, fully one third remains allocated
to operations in Northern Ireland, although the new building is
part of a UK-wide escalation of its role. According to the Belfast
Telegraph, MI5 is developing a networked 10-building infrastructure
for its 2,850 staff, including regional stations in England, Scotland,
Wales and Northern Ireland.
Opposing Annex E, in November the constitutional nationalist
Social Democratic Labour Party tabled an amendment to the Northern
Ireland Bill, based on the St. Andrews Agreement, which
would have provided the Police Ombudsman with powers to investigate
joint operations between the PSNI and MI5.
For their part, Sinn Fein claimed to reject any role
for MI5 in Ireland or in civic policing.
In response, last month, the Blair government assured Sinn
Fein that MI5 in Ireland would be a stand-alone body,
that security arrangements would be overseen by a Liberal Democrat
peer, and that a liaison group would be set up between the PSNI
and MI5. No PSNI officers would be seconded to, or under the control
of, MI5.
Presented with this worthless assurance from the government
that launched a bloodbath in Iraq on a fabricated pretext, Sinn
Feins policing and justice spokesman, Gerry Kelly, was ecstatic.
He proclaimed that Blairs statement ensured that MI5
have no part in policing in the North.... We have a PSNI which
is not signed up to MI5 and which will hold them to account.
See Also:
Northern Ireland:
The arrest of Kevin Fulton and the Omagh bombing
[1 December 2006]
Northern Ireland:
the Donaldson affair and the threat to democratic rights
[1 December 2006]
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