Coveney condemns UK government’s plans for proposed amnesty for Troubles offences

ireland
Coveney Condemns Uk Government’s Plans For Proposed Amnesty For Troubles Offences
The Government has repeatedly made clear its opposition to a proposed amnesty for Troubles offences. Photo: PA Images
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Dominic McGrath, PA

Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney has hit out at the UK government legacy plans, calling them a “radical departure” from the approach agreed between the two countries.

The Government has repeatedly made clear its opposition to a proposed amnesty for Troubles offences.

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The UK government wants to bring in a statute of limitations on future prosecutions of military veterans and ex-paramilitaries for Troubles incidents predating April 1998.

However, these plans have faced delays, as well as strident opposition from victims’ families and all the political parties in the North.

Politicians from all parties in the Republic took the opportunity to condemn the UK government proposals in the Dáil on Wednesday.

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The debate came after a police watchdog investigation into a series of loyalist murders.

Ombudsman Marie Anderson found the RUC had been engaged in “collusive behaviours” with loyalist killers in relation to the series of murders in the 1990s.

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Mr Coveney said the investigation had “shone an absolutely necessary light on aspects of the conflict in Northern Ireland that deserve serious consideration in this house”.

He told the Dáil that a one-side approach has never worked in Northern Ireland.

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He said the UK and Irish governments must work together with parties in Northern Ireland to tackle the “complex and sensitive” issue.

“This is why the Stormont House Agreement, agreed in 2014, after a long and difficult period of negotiation, was a pivotal moment in the peace process on this island,” Mr Coveney told the Dáil.

He said the UK approach is “essentially a proposal for an unconditional amnesty for those not yet convicted”.

He added: “British government proposals have caused deep upset and concern to victims and survivors, who were understandably shocked by the idea that the avenue to justice open to all other victims of crime, but now somehow be closed off to them forever by law.”

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He said the proposals have also caused “grave concern to international human rights bodies”.

Mr Coveney said: “They are without international precedent.

“We cannot countenance a situation in which families do not have access to a process of basic justice or where families would be left to once again fight through the courts for years to come to actually to challenge a government-imposed process.

Mary Lou McDonald
Sinn Féin president Mary Lou McDonald urged the Government to do more (Brian Lawless/PA)

“We will continue to caution the British government strongly against unilaterally legislating on these issues.

“We’ve also remained open and ready to engage seriously with them and others to find a way forward.

“Unilateral action here cannot work. It never works, in truth, when it comes to Northern Ireland.”

Mr Coveney said he has met families who have also urged his Government to do more to deliver justice for the victims of crimes that had a cross-border element.

“It is essential that we recognise and respond to that challenge,” he said.

Sinn Féin leader Mary Lou McDonald told the Dáil: “The series of reports published by the police ombudsman illuminate in horrific detail what has been known for decades.”

She also attacked the UK legacy plans.

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“Boris Johnson and his government cannot ignore their responsibilities,” she said.

“They cannot be allowed to ride roughshod over the opportunity of all our communities to see that future made real. We’ve seen that happen far too many times.

“And so it is now the responsibility of the Irish Government to make sure that the British government understands this and understands that this will not happen again.”

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