Voices from the Grave: Two Men's War in Ireland (18 page)

BOOK: Voices from the Grave: Two Men's War in Ireland
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In March 1999 the IRA admitted that it had killed and secretly buried nine people during the course of the Troubles, all in the 1970s, and offered to help locate their graves. The statement came during a moment of crisis in the peace process. The Good Friday Agreement had been successfully negotiated the previous year but a number of obstacles still stood in the way of implementing the power-sharing government that lay at the centre of the deal, most notably the refusal of the IRA to begin decommissioning its weapons. Towards the end of March, the deadline for devolution was extended and crisis talks with British premier Tony Blair and his Irish counterpart, Bertie Ahern, were convened in Northern Ireland, during which the IRA’s statement on the disappeared was made public. Some saw the move as an effort to deflect pressure on the weapons issue but on the day it was released the British and Irish governments granted immunity to anyone providing information about the whereabouts of the disappeareds’ remains, a sign that the Provos and the governments were co-ordinating their approach to the issue in the face of growing pressure. Families of the missing had been campaigning for the truth for some time and when President Clinton gave them his support, signalling what the
United States, a partner in the peace process, wished to see happen, the satisfactory resolution of the issue was thus elevated to something of a test of the IRA’s peace-process bona fides.

In that, and a subsequent statement, the IRA said that Jean McConville was killed because she was an informer and that she had admitted so at the time. This was an allegation that her family, especially her daughter Helen, who was fifteen when her mother disappeared, and her husband Seamus McKendry angrily denied. They maintained that she had been killed because she had gone to the aid of a British soldier who had been shot near her flat in Divis by the IRA, that her crime was to show compassion to a fellow human being who happened to be wearing a British uniform. Their narrative depicted the IRA in the worst possible light and created even more sympathy for the family.

Although the IRA had given the impression that it knew where the bodies of the missing had been hidden, this was far from the case. A cross-border commission established to co-ordinate efforts to find the bodies had, by 2003, been able to locate just three of the nine victims. In Jean McConville’s case, the IRA had given a location that was not precise: a beach near Carlingford Lough in County Louth in the Irish Republic, a picturesque spot at the southern foot of the Mourne mountains. Repeated searches of the area had produced nothing. Then, in August 2003, a walker discovered her remains on Shelling Hill beach some distance from the spot identified by the IRA. A storm the previous spring had washed away part of a car park and roadway constructed on top of her unmarked grave and eventually erosion exposed her body.
35
An autopsy established that she had been killed by a single gunshot fired into the back of her head, the classic hallmark of an IRA execution.

Confirmation that Jean McConville had been killed and dis appeared by the IRA, together with growing public disquiet about the case, was the spur for an official British inquiry carried out by the new Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland, Nuala O’Loan, at the behest of two of McConville’s children. In July and again in August 2006, O’Loan pronounced her verdict. While her
inquiry centred on whether the police had properly investigated McConville’s disappearance at the time – she concluded that they hadn’t – O’Loan also dealt with the vexed question of the reason for her death. Her conclusion left the matter unresolved, vindicating neither the IRA nor her family. ‘As part of our investigation’, O’Loan pronounced, ‘we have looked very extensively at all the intelligence available at the time. There is no evidence that Mrs McConville gave information to the police, the military or the Security Service. She was not an informant.’ But O’Loan also discounted the family’s explanation, that she had been killed after she had helped a wounded soldier; the only soldier shot around the time she disappeared was wounded after she had been abducted. Some of her children had a memory of her aiding a wounded soldier, she said, but that had been in January 1972, ten months before she was taken away by the IRA. If this had angered the IRA, it had taken an inordinately long time, ten months or so, for them to take their revenge.

Gerry Adams had by this stage become enmeshed in the Jean McConville saga, formally by virtue of the fact that at the time of her disappearance he had been Brigade Commander of the IRA, the figure at whose metaphorical desk the buck stopped. Under pressure to respond to demands that Republicans should come clean about the affair, Adams met McConville’s daughter Helen and her husband, Seamus McKendry, in 2000 and denied all knowledge to them about her disappearance. During one exchange with McKendry, Adams had told the couple that he could not have been involved as he had been interned at the time. According to McKendry, ‘He told Helen and I: “Thank God I was in prison when she disappeared.”’
36
In fact Adams was very much at large when Jean McConville was abducted and was not arrested and interned until July 1973, more than six months after her death. None the less, the efforts by Gerry Adams and his colleagues to distance the Sinn Fein leader from the McConville scandal have been largely successful because no other participant in Jean McConville’s abduction and disappearance has come forward publicly to say what actually did happen. Until now.

Brendan Hughes was deeply involved in the affair – he handled McConville’s initial questioning by the IRA and took the first decisions on how to deal with her case. When the IRA was told that Jean McConville had a radio transmitter in her apartment, they searched her flat and discovered it. Hughes said he confiscated the transmitter – given to her by a British Army handler – and she was taken away to be interrogated. Hughes said that she had admitted working for the Army but, because she was a woman, she was set free with a warning not to do it again. Shortly afterwards, the IRA in the area discovered she had resumed working for the military and this time she was taken away and killed. On the vexed questions of who decided to disappear her and why, Hughes confirmed there was a dispute between Adams and his deputy, Ivor Bell, about whether to hide her body or to leave it in a public place, with Adams advocating her disappearance. The reason for hiding her body, he said, was because she was a woman – the same reason Hughes gave for releasing her the first time. Adams prevailed and, Hughes alleged, gave the order for her to be taken away and buried. It is evident that Hughes decided to reveal what he knew about the Jean McConville affair because of his anger at Adams’s own efforts to distance himself from the IRA and the various decisions that caused the loss of human life. When the Jean McConville scandal worsened in the peace-process years, Hughes confirmed, Gerry Adams attempted internally to place the blame for her disappearance on Bell. Hughes’s testimony from the grave brings the Jean McConville case to a new level.

At that time Divis Flats still existed

and it was a major source of
recruitment and activity by the IRA … I’m not sure how it originally
started, how she became … an informer [but] she was an
informer; she had a transmitter in her house. The British supplied
the transmitter into her flat. ——, watching the movements of IRA
volunteers around Divis Flats at that time … the unit that was in … Divis Flats at the time was a pretty active unit. A few of them,
one of them in particular, young ——, received information from
—— that —— had something in the house. I sent … a squad over
to the house to check it out and there was a transmitter in the house.
We retrieved the transmitter, arrested her, took her away, interrogated
her, and she told [us] what she was doing. We actually knew
what she was doing because we had the transmitter … if I can get
the hold of this other wee man he can tell you more about it because
I wasn’t actually on the scene at the time. And because she was a
woman … we let her go with a warning [and] confiscated the
transmitter. A few weeks later, I’m not sure again how the information
came about … another transmitter was put into her house …
she was still co-operating with the British; she was getting paid by
the British to pass on information. That information came to our
attention. The special squad was brought into operation then. And
she was arrested again and taken away

 
 

Q.
Arrested by the IRA?

 
 

A.
By the IRA
.

 
 

Q.
For the second time?

 
 

A.
Yeah. Second time, and that was as much as I knew. I knew she
was being executed. I didn’t know she was going to be buried … or
‘disappeared’ as they call it now. I know one particular person on
the Belfast Brigade at the time, Ivor [Bell], argued for [her] to be
shot, yes, but to be left on the street. Because to take her away and
bury her … would serve no purpose, people wouldn’t know. So
looking back on it now, what happened to her … was wrong. I
mean, she deserved to be executed, I believe, because she was an
informer and she put other people’s lives at risk … There was only
one man who gave the order for that woman to be executed. That …
man is now the head of Sinn Fein. He went to this family’s house
and promised an investigation into the woman’s disappearance.
That man is the man who gave the … order for that woman to be
executed. Now tell me the morality in that … I wasn’t involved in
the execution of the woman … but she was an informer, and … I
warned her the first time. I took a device out of her house … and
warned her. She’d a load of kids. She carried on doing it. I did not
give the order to execute that woman – he did. And yet he went to
see them kids – they are not kids any more, they are grown up – to
promise an investigation into her death … [Ivor Bell] argued, ‘If
you are going to kill her, put her on the street. What’s the sense of
killing her and burying her if no one knows what she was killed for?
It’s pure revenge if you kill someone and bury them. What’s the
point of it?

 
 

Q.
And he, Adams, rejected this logic?

 
 

A.
He rejected it
.

 
 

Q.
And ordered her to be disappeared?

 
 

A.
To be buried. She was an informer
.

 
 

Q. …
with all her kids and the way the family was left, in hindsight,
do you still feel as strongly about executing her?

 
 

A.
Not really, no, not now … at that time, certainly … but not now
because as everything has turned out, not one death was worth it
.

 
 

Q. …
after the event, did you never discuss the issue with Gerry as
to why it happened, what was the purpose of it, given that you had
a different attitude?

 
 

A. …
there was a never great deal of [that sort of] conversation;
certainly we talked about it but the war was so intense and, I mean,
you might have had twelve, fourteen operations taking place on the
one day, and I never got a great deal of time to sit down and think
about [anything] except organising operations and getting operations
out and getting kills and getting bombs in the town and so
forth … you never thought about it too much because you were so
intent on carrying out the war. I lived from operation to operation

you were robbing banks, robbing post offices, robbing trains,
planting bombs, shooting Brits, trying to stay alive yourself, trying
not to be arrested
.

 
 

Q.
Well, you know in recent years that Gerry has been trying to
blame Ivor?

 
 

A.
Hmm
.

 
 

Q.
And has actually been telling people like Bobby Storey to go and
ask Ivor Bell questions because Ivor Bell would know the circumstances
of Jean McConville. And Ivor Bell when asked is obviously
denying it, and saying, ‘Well, go and ask Gerry, coz he’s the man
.’

 
 

A.
Hmm
.

 
 

Q.
It seems very machiavellian, I mean, you worked with all these
people
.

 
 

A. …
I just can’t believe, well, I do believe but I find it so difficult
to come to terms [with] the fact that this man has turned his back
on everything that we ever did … I never carried out a major operation
without the OK or the order from Gerry. And for him to sit in
his plush office in Westminster or Stormont or wherever and deny it,
I mean, it’s like Hitler denying that there was ever a Holocaust …
I don’t know where it ends, once you get onto [a] position where you … start denying that you ever were what you were. It’s a lie and …
to continue telling lies and to deny his whole life. I just cannot
accept that it’s so, I mean, did he not go and talk to Willie Whitelaw
as an IRA representative? Of course he did
.

 
 

Q.
So was he lying when he denied any involvement in ‘Bloody
Friday’; was he lying when he denied any involvement in the killing
and disappearing of Jean McConville?

 
 

A.
He was lying
.

 
 

Q.
Does he just lie about his whole life in the IRA?

 
 

A.
It … appears that way, that he has just denied and lied about
everything that ever took place. And to do that gives me the impression
that the man cannot be trusted
.

 
 

Q.
Although you agreed with the informer executions, do you think
the reason for the disappeared was that there was an element of
embarrassment at the Belfast Brigade – which was supposed to be a
lean, mean, fighting machine, striking terror and fear into the heart
of the enemy [but] had actually itself been extensively penetrated,
and he didn’t want this known?

 
 

A.
I don’t believe that is the case … As regards McConville … I
think the reason why she [was] disappeared was because she was
a woman. The reason why Seamy Wright [was] disappeared is
because of the Republican family that Seamy Wright came from …
McKee was the same … he came from a Republican family and that
was the reason there … to protect the family … that was the reason
as well for Eamon Molloy’s
||
disappearance, because of the Republican
family connection, because of his wife, Kate. I don’t know where
the logic came from. I don’t, well, obviously it came from Adams; he
was the person that was largely responsible for the disappeared …
But looking back on it now … it was totally, totally wrong
.

BOOK: Voices from the Grave: Two Men's War in Ireland
12.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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