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slaughter of 33 innocent people by loyalist bombs in Dublin and Monaghan
in 1974 was one of the biggest atrocities of the "Troubles"
in Ireland in the last 30 years.
It defies belief then, that Judge Barron who conducted an inquiry at the
behest of the Dail into the handling of the investigation of this atrocity
by the security forces, found the most incredible bungling by the gardai
and indeed the Fine Gael/Labour Government of the day.
The Judge found that methods of inquiry that should have been routine,
such as showing photographs of suspects to people who thought they saw
the bombers, were not carried out.
Also, when the British Government told the Irish Government that some
of the suspected bombers were in custody in the North, the gardai did
not even ask to question them. However, serious questions have also to
be asked about the amount of co-operation that Blair and the British Government
gave to the Barron investigation.
In his report, Judge Barron states that out of 58,000 documents in the
Northern Ireland office in some way relating to the atrocity, he received
not a single original document. The Judge said that this limited the scope
of his investigation.
Over the past year, I have questioned the Taoiseach Bertie Ahern about
this issue in the Dail on many occasions. I asked him why, if his relationship
with Blair was so good, the full intelligence files on the Dublin and
Monaghan bombings would not be made available to the investigation.
The Taoiseach replied that he accepted the word of Prime Minister Blair,
that every co-operation would be given; which prompted me to ask him very
recently whether the Prime Minister perhaps, thought him to be as gullible
on this issue as he was when he accepted that there were weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq which were an immediate and present threat to certain
countries.
For many years the organisation Justice for the Forgotten, made up of
victims and relatives of those killed in the bombings, have been pushing
for the full truth to be told.
They continue to call for a full and transparent public inquiry which
they feel might yield more of the truth and put more pressure on the British
Government to co-operate in terms of information that is available but
has not come forth as yet.
As a representative of the Socialist Party, I fully support the relatives
in this demand and will continue to assist and call for this in the Dail.
In order for the truth to emerge from such an inquiry, all documents of
the British state and its secret service must be made public. Then the
relatives may find out what really happened. Then working class people
in Ireland and Britain may discover how much the British state was involved
in this atrocity.
The Dublin and Monaghan atrocities point up the utter futility of the
methods of paramilitary terror in resolving any issues affecting working
people in society. Not only are the methods of individual terror divisive
in the working class, invariably it is innocent working class people who
suffer the consequences of the atrocities carried out.
These atrocities should be a constant reminder to us of the need to push
forward a strategy to overcome the sectarian divisions on this island
and this is a task that can only be achieved by working class people,
Protestant and Catholic, coming together to resolve the crucial economic
and social questions confronting them in this society and with the alternative
of a new, democratic and socialist society in place of the present system
which has traditionally relied on divide and rule to survive.
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