Bloody Sunday families to challenge decision against ex-soldier prosecutions

ireland
Bloody Sunday Families To Challenge Decision Against Ex-Soldier Prosecutions
John Kelly, whose 17-year-old brother, Michael, was killed in Derry on Bloody Sunday standing beside a mural in the Bogside area of the city. Photo: PA Archive/PA Images
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By Rebecca Black, PA

The families of five men shot dead by the British army on Bloody Sunday are to challenge in court the decision by the North’s Public Prosecution Service (PPS) not to prosecute former soldiers.

The PPS announced in 2019 that one veteran, known as Soldier F, would face charges.

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On Thursday, the families of Jackie Duddy, Michael Kelly, John Young, Michael McDaid and William McKinney were granted permission by the Belfast High Court to challenge decisions not to prosecute five other former members of the Parachute Regiment.

The judicial review challenge has been listed for hearing for five days beginning on September 20th.

Fearghal Shiels, of Madden and Finucane, said the families are looking forward to the hearings later this year.

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“This application arises out of decisions taken in March 2019 by the PPS not to prosecute these soldiers, and a decision upheld after an internal review of that decision by the PPS in September 2020,” he said.

“The families warmly welcome today’s decision and look forward with confidence to the full hearing in the autumn.”

Bloody Sunday prosecutions
Families and relatives of those who died on a previous march through Derry. Photo: Liam McBurney/PA

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Thirteen civilians were killed on January 30th, 1972 after soldiers from the Parachute Regiment opened fire on a civil rights demonstration, in an incident which became known as Bloody Sunday.

Fifteen others were shot and injured. One of the injured died months later from an inoperable tumour and some consider him the 14th fatality.

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