Bloody Sunday Inquiry: apology is not enough
On 15 June, Lord Saville finally published his inquiry into the events of Bloody Sunday, 30 January 1972, when British paratroopers shot 26 Irish nationalists at a mass demonstration in In the immediate aftermath of Bloody Sunday, the British government set up the whitewash Widgery Tribunal, which promptly gave the soldiers the all clear. The victims of state violence were then targets of a vicious propaganda campaign designed to paint them as ‘gunmen and nail bombers’, which Widgery himself endorsed. The British government only agreed to set up a new inquiry when political expediency required a concession to the nationalists as part of the Good Friday peace process
In reality the role of the British government has never been investigated. The parameters were tightly restricted, and nowhere do the words ‘unlawful killing’ or ‘murder’ appear in this report. Saville denies any suggestion of high level political involvement in the massacre, stating: ‘The immediate responsibility for the deaths and injuries on Bloody Sunday lies with those members of Support Company whose unjustifiable firing was the cause of those deaths and injuries’.
The soldiers who testified were granted immunity for their evidence and can only face prosecution if they are considered to have perjured themselves. Whether such proceedings are brought will be determined not by whether there is sufficient evidence but by political considerations, rendering prosecution unlikely.
Of the hundreds of Irish people the British army has murdered in
The Saville Inquiry took 12 years and cost £195 million. As the families have pointed out, the lives of their those massacred that day are priceless. But the British government will consider the money well spent if it secures l
The responsibility for Bloody Sunday lies squarely with British imperialism. It was the British government that had tried to violently suppress the nationalist uprising in the north of
There is no validity to issuing an apology for this massacre when it is quite clear that the British government and its Army will massacre, torture and violently suppress its opponents again whenever it feels it is necessary: witness the
Paul Mallon
Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! will consider in more depth the importance of the events of Bloody Sunday in the context of the revolutionary struggle against British imperialism in
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