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Effective today, the contact details for the Northern Ireland Veterans' Association have changed to the following

The Secretary,
57 Mortimer Street,
Derby DE24 8FX

Email: membership@nivets.org.uk
Web: www.nivets.org.uk
mob. 07368 293729


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Police Ombudsman report into Claudy bomb attack due

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  • Police Ombudsman report into Claudy bomb attack due

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ID:	303190Northern Ireland's Police Ombudsman is due to publish his report into the alleged involvement of a priest in a 1972 IRA bombing in County Londonderry.

    Nine people, including an eight-year-old girl, were killed in the village of Claudy in one of the most controversial incidents of the Troubles.

    There was an alleged deal between the UK government and the Catholic Church not to arrest Father James Chesney.
    Fr Chesney was moved across the Irish border by the Church after the attack.
    The priest, who died in 1980, had been the curate in Cullion, a small parish in County Londonderry.

    No-one convicted

    The Bishop of Derry, Neil Farren, responding to rumours that Fr Chesney was a member of the South Derry Brigade of the IRA and may have been involved in the bombings, called him in for questioning.
    In 2002, Bishop Farren's successor, Edward Daly, told the BBC that Fr Chesney had denied any involvement with the IRA "utterly, unequivocally, vehemently".

    However, he did tell his superiors that he had "republican sympathies, very strong republican sympathies".
    The Ombudsman, Al Hutchinson, has been examining the original RUC investigation.
    No-one has ever been convicted of the bomb attack in which both Protestants and Catholics were killed.
    The youngest victim was eight-year-old Kathryn Eakin who was cleaning the windows of the family grocery store when the first bomb exploded.

    The other people killed were Joseph McCluskey, 39; David Miller, 60; James McClelland, 65; William Temple, 16; Elizabeth McElhinney, 59; Rose McLaughlin, 51; Patrick Connolly, 15; and Arthur Hone, 38.
    As well as the power to investigate complaints against the Police Service of Northern Ireland, the Police Ombudsman also has the authority to probe investigations carried out by the predecessor to the PSNI, the RUC.
    More general investigations into incidents during the Troubles are handled by a dedicated group of PSNI detectives - the Historical Enquiries Team.

    'Bring justice'

    BBC Ireland correspondent Mark Simpson said the report "is expected to confirm that the authorities at the time were aware of the suspected involvement of a priest in the atrocity - but failed to arrest him".
    "Instead, a secret deal was done between the Catholic Church and the state to move Fr Jim Chesney across the border into County Donegal," our correspondent added.

    "The rumour which has been swirling around the County Londonderry village for the past 38 years is there was no justice for the nine people killed, simply a cover-up.

    "If the Ombudsman's report substantiates it, there will be questions for the Catholic Church to answer."
    Speaking in 2002 shortly after the investigation reopened, Merle Eakin, the mother of Kathryn Eakin, said: "We are just hopeful that they will bring justice and the people who are still alive will be brought to justice - that is what we really want."
    In 2005, four people, including a Sinn Fein Assembly member, were arrested in connection with the bombing.

    They were released without charge a few days later, with Sinn Fein's Martin McGuinness calling it a political stunt.

    • Guest's Avatar
      #11
      Eggy commented
      Editing a comment
      Originally posted by slapper
      Our lads did the right thing in Londonderry, no matter what a stupid 200 million quid inquiry says. The Sky Pilots were always at it. There was a priest at Holy Cross church in Belfast, who tied pieces of colored cloth to the railings as a signal to snipers in the Ardoyne when a foot patrol was coming up the Woodvale. Nothing happened to him either.
      Slap's not only did this tell the sniper that a patrol was coming, it also told him his wind and variation, enabling him to have a more accurate shot.

    • Filbert Fox
      #12
      Filbert Fox commented
      Editing a comment
      Just saw this news item come up on the BBC news and as usual it went back to Bloody Sunday and intimated that it all started from that day . Bloody typical BBC no mention of the two and a half years of murder and mayhem caused by the IRA from 1969 to 1972 . The message they gave was clear the Claudy bombing was our fault and a direct result of Bloody Sunday. God i hate the BBC.

    • Guest's Avatar
      #13
      Guest commented
      Editing a comment


      This is the official PSNI report.
    Posting comments is disabled.

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