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Adams called upon to withdraw comments on Smithwick Tribunal report

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Gerry Adams

Gerry Adams

Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams has come under fire from politicians on both sides of the border for his comments on the report of the Smithwick Tribunal yesterday.

The Louth TD said that RUC officers Harry Breen and Bob Buchanan had taken a “laissez faire” attitude to their own safety, which has been reported in the media that they were to blame for their murders.

Justice Minister Alan Shatter yesterday described Mr Adams’ remarks as “nauseating”.

Speaking at a press conference in Farmleigh House in Dublin, Mr Shatter pointed to sections in the report relating to Mr Adams.

The Minister said Mr Adams had appeared at an event in Crossmaglen shortly after the double shooting when a man wearing a hood gave an explanation for the murders.

Mr Shatter said it was “very unlikely” Mr Adams did not know more about what happened to the two men.

Fianna Fáil leader Micheál Martin called for a full Dáil debate on the report and also criticised Mr Adams over his statement about the two murdered officers.

He said the statement should be withdrawn and it almost by implication blamed the officers themselves for their killing.

Mr Adams responded that his public statement reflected the views of the Smithwick report. He described the two RUC officers as brave men doing their duty as they saw it in the same way that the IRA did their duty as they saw it.

Chief superintendent Harry Breen and superintendent Bob Buchanan were shot dead on March 20th, 1989 near the Border in south Armagh shortly after a meeting with gardaí in Dundalk, Co Louth.

The Smithwick Tribunal report published yesterday found someone in Dundalk Garda station tipped off the IRA before they were killed.

In the interview on Newstalk radio Mr Adams said the officers failed to show due regard for their safety and added he was not aware of collusion involving gardai in IRA killings.

“If you read the evidence (to tribunal lawyers) by the former IRA volunteers and I say this with as much sensitivity as I can muster – these two very prominent RUC officers were sailing in and out of Dundalk Garda station, (and) were doing so in quite an open way,” Mr Adams said.

“The former IRA volunteers said that one of the officers was spotted coming from the station, that they then used a house overlooking the station to monitor comings and goings, that they were able to trace – I think there was also a pattern in terms of meetings.”

Mr Adams said: “When you have that type of laissez-faire disregard for their own security, by both An Garda Síochána in relation to these two officers, and more importantly these officers themselves – here they were in the heart of south Armagh in the middle of a very, very severe conflict at that time, and seemed to think that they were immune from attack by the IRA, and tragically as it turned out for them that was not the case.

“When you have that type of failure to protect the RUC operatives in the middle of a war then what happened happens.

“I’m sure the same thing has happened with IRA volunteers who were killed, that it was not necessarily intelligence or inside information but simply that they made a mistake. This has happened tragically in all conflicts.”

In the interview on Newstalk radio Mr Adams said he was not aware of collusion involving the Garda force in IRA killings.



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