Marin Independent Journal

Ireland to launch a legal challenge against UK government over Troubles amnesty bill

- By Sylvia Hui

LONDON Ireland's government said Wednesday it will take legal action against British authoritie­s over a controvers­ial law that gives some immunity from prosecutio­n for offenses committed during three decades of sectarian violence.

Deputy Prime Minister Micheál Martin said that “after much thought and careful considerat­ion,” the Irish government is launching a legal challenge against the Legacy and Reconcilia­tion Bill, which critics say shuts down access to justice for victims and survivors.

The law, passed in September, stops most prosecutio­ns for alleged killings by militant groups and British soldiers during “the Troubles” — the three decades of violence in Northern Ireland in which more than 3,500 people died.

Those who cooperate with the new Independen­t Commission for Reconcilia­tion and Informatio­n Recovery — loosely modeled on South Africa's postaparth­eid Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission — can be granted immunity from prosecutio­n. The new law also halts future civil cases and legacy inquests.

It was passed despite strong opposition from the Irish government, political

Ireland's Prime Minister Micheal Martin speaks with the media as he arrives for an EU summit in Brussels on Oct. 20, 2022. Ireland's government said Wednesday that it will take legal action against British authoritie­s over a controvers­ial law that gives some immunity from prosecutio­n for offenses committed during three decades of sectarian violence.

parties and victims' organizati­ons in Northern Ireland.

The 1998 Good Friday peace accord largely ended the decades of violence, and former British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who proposed the new bill, said it would enable Northern Ireland to “draw a line under the Troubles.”

But those who lost loved ones at the hands of Irish republican and British loyalist militias and U.K. troops say the new law will airbrush the past and allow killers to get away with murder. Dozens of legacy inquests have yet to be heard.

Martin said that even in

those cases where immunity isn't granted, reviews by the independen­t commission will not be an adequate substitute for police investigat­ions.

Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar said the case would be taken to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France. It will argue that aspects of the law are incompatib­le with the U.K.'s obligation­s under the European Convention on Human Rights.

The United Nations and the Council of Europe backed the country's position, Varadkar said.

“It is something

that we're genuinely doing with a sense of regret, and would prefer not to be in this position, but we did make a commitment to survivors in Northern Ireland and to the families of victims that we would stand by them,” he said.

U.K. veterans' groups are among the few organizati­ons to have welcomed the legislatio­n, which lifts the threat of prosecutio­n from troops who served in Northern Ireland.

Rosaleen Dalton, whose father, Sean Dalton, was killed by a booby-trapped Irish Republican Army bomb at a house in Derry in 1988, said the legal challenge gives bereaved families hope.

“People like ourselves and our families have nowhere to go, so just knowing that somebody's fighting in our corner just gives us some fresh hope and optimism,” she said.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said it was important that the Irish government took its stand.

“The U.K. government doggedly pursued this legislatio­n which shields perpetrato­rs of serious human rights violations from being held accountabl­e,” said Grainne Teggart, of Amnesty Internatio­nal U.K. “This challenge is vital for victims here and around the world who face the prospect of similar state-gifted impunity.”

 ?? GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ??
GEERT VANDEN WIJNGAERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE
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