28.2.05

Guardian

People's revolt against the IRA gathers momentum

Angelique Chrisafis, Ireland correspondent
Monday February 28, 2005
The Guardian

The people's revolt against the IRA gang who murdered Robert McCartney continued to grow last night despite Sinn Féin's attempts to defuse the crisis, with 1,000 protesters demanding the expulsion of more rogue republicans.

The McCartney family led an angry protest in the republican Short Strand area where the IRA's cover-up of the murder was compared to the lies told by the British government about Bloody Sunday.

Despite the IRA's court martial and expulsion of three members - allegedly including the former officer commanding the Belfast brigade - the family claim at least nine others implicated in the killing are being sheltered by the organisation.

They also claimed the IRA's version of the murder outside a Belfast pub - in which Mr McCartney and a friend were beaten, stabbed and left for dead - was wrong and that a whispering campaign against the family was being conducted.

The unprecedented protest in Sinn Féin's heartland has put the party under severe pressure with Alex Maskey, the former Sinn Féin mayor of Belfast, openly confronted on the street yesterday.

Asked whether, as residents claim, two of the men involved in the clean-up after the murder had previously acted as his election workers, he said he would not comment on "falsehoods in the media".

He also denied claims by residents that republicans had ordered children to riot in the Markets area to impede police investigating the murder.

As he was answering these questions, one of Robert McCartney's uncles burst through the crowd, shouting: "You have nine other members of this gang ... who butchered my nephew. When are you going to hand them over? You couldn't even remember Robert's name [after the murder]. Hand over the 12."

In front of placards held by Mr McCartney's family saying "Shame on them" and "Evil will triumph if good people do nothing", Paula McCartney demanded her brother's killers and those who cleaned up the crime scene "do the patriotic thing and hand themselves over". She said: "If not, they should be pressurised to do so. If these men walk free from this, then everyone in Ireland should fear the consequences."

Despite the IRA's call on Friday night that no one should be intimidated into not giving evidence, one Short Strand source said the three expelled IRA men were still considered to be under their protection.

The source said the IRA members were at their homes and one was at an IRA safe house. One of the men involved in the murder had been expelled before, but was allowed back shortly afterwards, after undergoing a punishment shooting.

A senior local IRA member was seen at the rally and several IRA members not involved in the murder were seen walking around the area before the rally. One source said: "This was a subtle form of intimidation."

A man who was questioned by police and released this weekend was not one of the three expelled IRA men.

Meanwhile, the Sinn Féin leader, Gerry Adams, yesterday repeated his support for the McCartney family at an IRA commemoration in south Armagh. Tellingly, he signalled that there would be "more hard choices" for republicans and said criminality had no place in the movement. "There is no room in Sinn Féin for other than a clear and unambiguous commitment to democratic politics and the pursuit of our goals by legal and peaceful means."

Eamonn McCann, the civil rights leader, said it was a "savage irony" that Mr McCartney was butchered on the anniversary of Bloody Sunday, allegedly by men returning from a ceremony to mark the slaughter by paratroopers of 14 innocent Catholics in Derry.

"How dare they?" he said to rousing applause, adding that they had besmirched the campaign for the truth about Bloody Sunday. The cover-up of the McCartney murder had lowered republicans to the level of the British paratroopers, and cast a "dark shadow backwards" on the whole IRA struggle.

Mr McCann recognised the contribution of paramilitaries to the struggle for equal rights and said the McCartney campaign was not against any party.

But unless there was a people's revolt against this obvious injustice, a "dark shadow would be cast backwards" over the whole civil rights movement. He said if paramilitaries and former paramilitaries did not speak out now, they were demeaning their "experience and contribution" to the republican struggle. "It is utter hypocrisy for anybody to say now that they stand with the Bloody Sunday families unless they stand also with the family of Robert McCartney."

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