Gerry Conlon died on Saturday. He was
one of four people arrested, tortured and falsely imprisoned for carrying out
bomb attacks in Guildford and Woolwich in England in 1974. His father Giuseppe
was also arrested while visiting his son in prison and wrongly convicted of
involvement in bomb making. He died in prison.
The Guildford 4, the Maguire 7, the
Birmingham 6 and others were all victim of a series of grave miscarriages of
justice which saw the British police service, judiciary and political
establishment conniving in imprisoning citizens they knew to be innocent of any
wrong doing.
Gerry Conlon, Paul Hill, Carole
Richardson and Paddy Armstrong spent 15 years in English prisons under the most
horrendous of prison conditions, often in solitary confinement.
A public campaign in support of their
release eventually succeeded in achieving that in 1989. Following this Gerry
became a strong advocate for and campaigner on justice issues. As a victim of
injustice he was articulate and tireless in pursuit of justice. His death is a
loss to his family and friends but also to all of those who were touched by his
courage and who he endeavoured to help.
Within hours of his passing former SDLP
deputy leader Seamus Mallon sought to score political points against Sinn Féin
by accusing republicans of ‘almost conniving’ to keep innocent people behind
bars.
The responsibility for the detention
and incarceration of many innocent people in England and in Ireland rests
absolutely with the various police forces and judicial and political system.
The British police knew that the
Guildford 4 were innocent but they connived to keep them and other innocents in
prison.
Seamus Mallon’s line of argument,
though spurious and devoid of merit, was taken up by sections of the media. The
Taoiseach repeated this line in the Dáil on Wednesday.
Some of this has by now become little
more than a well-worn and tiresome routine that is rarely matched by the facts.
A column in the Irish Independent: ‘Weasel words from Adams on Conlon case
is used as a weapon in propaganda war ‘ is typical.
The Indo columnist wrongly claims that:
“Gerry Conlon was in jail because the IRA
bombed Guildford”. Like Seamus Mallon he ignores the facts. The British
police arrested the Guildford 4; tortured false statements from them; and then
railroaded them through a judicial process that was unjust and biased. That was the responsibility of the British
police. The IRA was responsible for the bombings. They made that clear at the
time.
The same Indo columnist goes on to
rewrite the history of the period. He claims that it was 1977 and as the IRA’s Balcombe
Street unit was about to “receive huge
sentences for other bombings they half-claimed that they were also responsible
for the Guildford bombings. Could they be believed?”
It was 1975 and yes the IRA could be
believed.
In December, 1975, the four IRA
Volunteers who became known as the Balcombe Street unit were arrested. Within
24 hours of their arrests they told senior British police officers that they,
and not the four people who had been recently convicted – later to become known
as the Guildford 4 - were involved in the bombings.
The British police said they would look
into these claims, but there is no evidence of any further investigation. At
the subsequent trial of the Balcombe Street unit it emerged that the forensic
evidence had been edited to remove all reference to Guildford and Woolwich.
On the strength of legal statements
given by members of the Balcombe Street unit, the Guildford Four were
eventually granted an appeal in October 1977.
At the appeal hearing, with the support
they explained later of the IRA leadership, Eddie Butler, Harry Duggan, Joe
O'Connell and Brendan Dowd testified that they were responsible for the Woolwich
attack. Brendan Dowd also accepted responsibility for the Guildford bomb
attack. All of the men said that the four persons convicted of the Guildford
and Woolwich bombings had played no part.
According to the highly respected
British Labour MP Chris Mullin, who campaigned for many years on behalf of the
Guildford Four and the Birmingham Six: “So
detailed was the Balcombe Street unit's account that it was not possible to
pretend that they had not been involved”.
Despite this, the British Appeal Court,
headed by Lord Roskill, perversely professed themselves satisfied and upheld
the convictions of the Guildford 4. They engaged in what Mullin described as “spectacular intellectual gymnastics” in
order to accept confessions obtained under torture and to deny the appeal.
Why did they do this? Because if it was accepted that the British police had fabricated confessions and ignored the evidence of those IRA Volunteers really responsible then as Lord Bridge argued in the Birmingham six case you would have to accept that the all of this “shows the police not only to be masters of the vile techniques of cruelty and brutality to suspects. It shows them to have a very lively and inventive imagination.”
Why did they do this? Because if it was accepted that the British police had fabricated confessions and ignored the evidence of those IRA Volunteers really responsible then as Lord Bridge argued in the Birmingham six case you would have to accept that the all of this “shows the police not only to be masters of the vile techniques of cruelty and brutality to suspects. It shows them to have a very lively and inventive imagination.”
This was what another British judge,
Lord Denning, speaking of the same case, called the “appalling vista” that would arise should it be proven that the
British police had deliberately imprisoned innocent people.
Later in his evidence to Sir John May's
Inquiry into the Guildford & Woolwich bombings in 1989, British Labour MP
Chris Mullen MP stated:
“In
the absence of an explanation a good deal more credible than any which has so
far been advanced, I submit that from soon after the arrest of the Balcombe
Street IRA unit it is inescapable that those in authority, up to the highest
level, realised that innocent people may have been convicted of the Guildford
and Woolwich bombings and were anxious to avoid facing up to that possibility.”
None
of this is any consolation to the families or the victims of these miscarriages
of justice like Gerry Conlon or his family. Neither is it any consolation to
the families of the victims or the victims of the IRA bombing.
Our
endeavour must be to ensure that these events never happen again. Efforts to
score political points by distorting or ignoring the facts makes no worthwhile
contribution to this.
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