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ireland, irish, ulster, ireland, irish, ulster, Sinn Féin, Irish America
???
(by Eamonn McCann, Hot Press)
Maybe Catherine Ross, Colette Dornan, Darren Malone, Padraig O'Connor and
Tomas Gorman would have been better advised to bomb a restaurant.
The five were among a group of around 300 who staged a "die-in" on the road
outside Belfast City Hall on April 8th last year, protesting against the war
on Iraq.
On August 12th, they made their 11th appearace at Belfast Magistrates' Court
to answer charges arising. The allegations included "malicious sitting."
A few hours before the April 8th protest, US bombs had smashed into a
restaurant in a suburb of Baghdad. Intelligence reports that Saddam Hussein would be
settling down to dinner there at the time proved as reliable as the rest of
the intelligence Bush and Blair used to justify war. Iraqbodycount estimates
that 19 innocent diners and restaurant workers were crushed to pulp or blown to
bits.
The men behind the restaurant bombing were, at the time, in conference a few
miles down the road from Belfast, at Hillsborough Castle, planning the
post-war governance of Iraq. It was at Hillsborough that Blair gave way to Bush and
agreed that the "coalition", not the UN, would run the show once the
occupation was secured. The outworking of this deal is now to be seen nightly on
television, in the pictures from Falluja, Najaf, Nassiriya, Sadr City, etc.
Ross, Dornan, Malone, O'Connor and Gorman weren't the only Northerners
intervening in Iraqi affairs on April 8th 2003. As PSNI officers were wading into
the City Hall protestors, David Trimble, Gerry Adams, Mark Durkan, Monica
McWilliams and others were presenting their passes to the seccurity guards at
Hillsborough as they trooped in to provide Bush with an opportunity to project
himself as a peace-maker. The only journalist present, Peter Stothard, described
the scene: "The human chess pieces arrive, stand in a horse-shoe shape, and are
severally and individually lectured."
It was this tableau which enabled the Belfast Telegraph to carry a front-page
April 8th splash describing the Hillsborough war council as a "Peace Summi
t."
More than a year later, it's those who protested for peace, rather than those
who facilitated war, who find themselves in the dock for, inter alia,
"malicious sitting."
It strikes me that the phrase might more accurately be applied to sitting
around a table pin-pointing restaurants to be bombed than sitting on a roadway
pleading for the bombing to stop. But what made the sitting malicious in the
minds of the magistracy was, apparently, that the five had smeared raspberry jam
on the roadway to simulate blood. A messy business, no doubt. Although hardly
as messy as the gobbets of flesh which will have plopped onto roadways around
the Baghdad restaurant a few hours earlier.
The five were bound over, the system which sent out the bombers warning the
campaigners against violence to desist from breaching the peace.
I am frequently told that it's counter-productive to bring revolutionary
politics into anti-war discourse. But what the case of the City Hall Five surely
shows is....
But let's turn away for a moment and first consider the case of Derryman
Seamus Doherty. If he weren't a "dissident" Republican, he'd be front-page news.
Doherty is in Maghaberry Prison, awaiting trial for possession of explosives.
The charge refers to an abortive Real IRA bomb attack near Newry in September
2002. Charges against Martin Brogan and Mark Carroll, both from
Castlewellan---they'd been arrested about a mile from where the bomb was intercepted on the
Omeath Road---were dropped last November. This followed discovery of
documents suggesting that forensic evidence may have been tampered with and attempts
made to suborn scientists.
Charges against a man arrested on suspicion of being the driver of the bomb
vehicle had been dropped without explanation at an earlier stage. This man,
Kevin Byrne, has since disappeared.
The case against Brogan and Carroll fell apart when a solicitor's clerk,
examining potential evidence at the North's Forensic Science Laboratory (FSNI) at
Carrickfergus, discovered an envelope marked "do not open" in the case file,
numbered 4981/02. Opening it, Adrian Carlin found a typed letter signed by
senior forensic scientist Dr. Gerry Murray describing a meeting with PSNI D
etective Chief Inspector Derek Williamson "to discuss my statement in relation to
case no. 4981/02." Williamson, the letter recorded, "requested that I prepare a
modified statement, omitting a number of sections from the original
statement. He provided me with a copy of my original statement with the relevant
sections highlighted."
The effect of the suggested deletions would have been to remove all reference
to traces of explosives found on Byrne's trousers, shirt, jacket, right hand
and finger nails. (Two months ago, Doherty's lawyers also discovered that
Byrne's DNA had been found on a bomb part and on the steering wheel, gearstick,
handbrake and ignition key of the abandoned bomb car.)
Carlin also discovered at the Carrickfergus laboratory a memo from senior
forensic officer Gordon McMillan to all FSNI staff claiming that: "On 25 Nov. I
sent a message to business managers informing them that an army search
organisation had been involved in the examination of items in relation to case
4981/02, that had not yet been delivered to the laboratory. This examination involved
them opening bags in the exhibits room of Newry Police Station and rubbing a
gloved hand over the surfaces of the contents, in this case items of
clothing." The clothing belonged to Brogan and Carroll.
Doherty's supporters say that the security forces were trying to contaminate
or manipulate the forensic evidence so as to make a case against Brogan and
Carroll, while undermining the case against Byrne, who, they allege, was a PSNI
Special Branch informer and agent provocateur.
The case against Doherty is based on DNA traces allegedly detected on the
Omeath Road bomb. Doherty had been arrested in Derry on an unrelated matter six
weeks prior to the discovery of the bomb and swabs taken for forensic
examination. He denies ever having handled a bomb. His lawyers have claimed from the
outset that the DNA on the bomb had been planted---a suggestion which, in light
of subsequent developments, can hardly be dismissed as implausible.
All these circumstances will be familiar to anyone involved 25 years ago in
the campaign for the release of the Birmingham Six. Although it is difficult
now to find an Irish Nationalist who was around at the time who doesn't claim to
have been active on behalf of the Six from the beginning, in fact it took
years for emigrant Irish organisations in England, British liberal lawyers and
socialist campaigners to coax, or shame, respectable Irish Nationalism into
taking an interest.
There was a number of reasons. Some, naively, found it difficult to believe
that the State would so blatantly conspire to falsify evidence. Some were
concerned that publicly espousing the cause of the Six would give the appearance of
tacitly approving the bombing in which 19 innocent drinkers and bar staff had
been crushed to pulp or blown to bits. After all, the Six were, or seemed to
be, politically sympathetic to the organisation behind the bombs. The Provos
then were anathema. Now the "dissidents" are anathema---to the Provos as to
other respectable Irish Nationalists.
Go figure. What I figure is that what the cases of the City Hall Five and
Seamus Doherty show is that if we don't turn the world upside down we'll never
set it on its feet.
July 30, 2004
________________
This article appeared in the August 26, 2004 edition of Hot Press.
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