The Troubles: families protest in Belfast as new legacy law shuts down some inquests

Families of Troubles victims gathered today (Wednesday) in Belfast in protest against new legacy laws.
Author: Nigel GouldPublished 1st May 2024

Families of Troubles victims gathered today (Wednesday) in Belfast in protest against new legacy laws.

Many carried placards and photographs of family members who were killed. A large black coffin bearing the word Justice was laid at the door of the building.

But the families vowed to carry on with their campaign "for truth and justice" on the day that all new uncompleted Troubles-related inquests and civil cases were stopped.

This was part of the terms from the UK Government's Legacy Act - with a new body, the Independent Commission for Reconciliation and Information Recovery becoming operational.

Bereaved families, victims and certain public authorities can request the ICRIR carry out an investigation.

During the protest outside the Northern Ireland Office headquarters in the city centre, Sinn Fein MP John Finucane said it was a "day of shame".

He added: "This is very much a day of shame. This is a day when legal challenges in our courts officially come to an end.

"Challenges that have been taken by families who on some occasions have been waiting up to five decades for the simple right to ask their questions in a court room.

"For the very simple basic democratic right to have an inquest for their loved ones.

"We know the amount of inquests that have not been able to conclude. They haven't been able to conclude because the British Government and their agencies knew that this day was coming.

"They knew and they were incentivised to delay and frustrate even more so than they had done over the previous five decades.

"The British Government have today officially removed the independence of our courts in looking at our past."

Mr Finucane's father Pat was murdered by loyalists in 1989.

The Sinn Fein MP said the Legacy Act had been introduced as an "obstacle in the way of families finding truth".

He also predicted that the new arrangements would not be in place for long.

He said: "It has already been tested in our domestic courts and has been shown to be flawed.

"We await the outcome of the inter-government state case taken by the Irish Government."

"We wait to see whether a British Labour government elected in the next election stand by their commitment to repeal this legislation."

The protest was also addressed by Damian Brown, the grandson of murder victim Sean Brown.

In March, a legacy inquest into the death of the GAA official was halted when a coroner said his ability to examine the killing had been compromised by the extent of confidential state material being excluded from the proceedings on national security grounds.

During a hearing it emerged that state agents were among more than 25 people linked by intelligence to the murder of Mr Brown in 1997.

The Government has since launched legal action over how the coroner dealt with a Public Interest Immunity (PII) process in the case.

Mr Brown told the rally: "We invested our full faith in the inquest process.

"An inquest being the most fundamental, rudimentary, perfunctory of legal processes that the state must conclude when a life is taken in the manner in which Sean's was stolen from him.

"Far from discharging its international obligations in law to convene and conclude Sean's inquest, the British Government has instead abandoned its legal obligations."

He described the Legacy Act as an "obscenity" and said opposition to it had united all communities in Northern Ireland.