Tag: Speeches

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Statement on Bloody Sunday Inquiry

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Statement on Bloody Sunday Inquiry

    The statement made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, in the House of Commons on 3 November 2010.

    I beg to move that this House does consider the report of the Bloody Sunday Inquiry.

    This debate follows the publication of that report on the 15th June this year and My Rt. Hon. Friend the Prime Minister’s statement in this House in response.

    I would like to thank the tribunal for its report. I have read the report in full and it is clearly a remarkable piece of work.

    Mr Speaker, let me reiterate the government’s clear position on this report. Lord Saville’s conclusions are shocking. What happened on Bloody Sunday was both unjustified and unjustifiable.

    As my Rt. Hon Friend the Prime Minister has said, we do not honour all those members of the armed forces who bravely upheld the rule of law in Northern Ireland by hiding from the truth.

    I am sure Honourable Members are familiar with many of the conclusions in the report, but I should put on record again some of the tribunal’s key findings:

    Lord Saville found:

    A “serious and widespread loss of fire discipline” by members of Support Company of The Parachute Regiment who entered the Bogside, “as a result of an order…which should not have been given.”

    Lord Saville found that “despite the contrary evidence given by the soldiers… none of them fired in response to attacks or threatened attacks by nail or petrol bombers.”

    And that many of the soldiers “knowingly put forward false accounts in order to seek to justify their firing”.

    In some of the most shocking sections of the report, Lord Saville concludes that some of those killed or injured were fleeing or going to the assistance of others.

    The report says that Patrick Doherty was shot whilst “crawling….away from the soldiers”.

    And refers to Alexander Nash who was

    “hit and injured by Army gunfire after he had gone to… tend his son”.

    Lord Saville records that James Wray was shot, in all probability, “when he was lying mortally wounded on the ground.”

    For those looking for statements of innocence, the report is clear that:

    “none of the casualties was posing a threat of causing death or serious injury, or indeed was doing anything else that could on any view justify their shooting.”

    As my Rt. Hon Friend the Prime Minister has said we do not defend the British army by defending the indefensible. It is clear from the tribunal’s unequivocal conclusions that some members of our armed forces acted wrongly.

    Mr Speaker, I reiterate the government’s apology for the events of that day.

    The government is deeply sorry for what happened.

    Just as the report is clear in its conclusions on the unjustifiable actions that took place in Londonderry on Bloody Sunday, so too it is clear in its other findings. There is no suggestion in the report that there was any premeditation or conspiracy by the UK government, the Northern Ireland government or senior members of the armed forces.

    Lord Saville said that there was no evidence that the authorities tolerated or encouraged “the use of unjustified lethal force.”

    Mr Speaker, the process surrounding this report has been the subject of much controversy. None of us could have anticipated that the inquiry would take 12 years or cost nearly £192 million. Our views on that are well documented. But I firmly believe it is right that our main focus now is not on the controversies surrounding the process, but on the substance of the report’s conclusions.

    And of course we should reflect not just on the report itself but on the reaction to Lord Saville’s conclusions and the Prime Minister’s statement.

    The whole House will have seen the memorable pictures broadcast around the world showing the response of the families and crowds in the Guildhall Square in Derry. The families of those killed, and those injured, had fought a long and determined campaign over 38 years to prove the innocence of their loved ones.

    I met the families shortly after publication and again earlier today. I heard for myself the impact the report and my Rt. Hon. Friend the Prime Minister’s statement has had on their lives.

    I should also take the opportunity to record my gratitude for the hard work of my officials and the Department in successfully managing the publication of the report. Publication was a major international event, with 419 press passes issued for the Guildhall square alone.

    It is also right to draw Honourable Members’ attention to other responses to the report that received less coverage but which are nonetheless important in illustrating the broad acceptance that Lord Saville’s report received.

    The leaders of the three main Protestant churches in Ireland made a symbolically important visit to the Bogside shortly after publication. And the First Minister, Peter Robinson, publicly indicated his acceptance of Lord Saville’s findings.

    Senior military figures, including the Chief of the Defence Staff General Sir David Richards and the former Chief of the General Staff, General Sir Mike Jackson, joined the Prime Minister in his apology for the events of Bloody Sunday.

    Mr Speaker, I want to make it absolutely clear – as my Rt. Hon Friend the Prime Minister did – that Bloody Sunday was not the defining story of the army’s service in Northern Ireland. Between 1969 and 2007, over 250,000 people served in Operation Banner, the longest continuous operation in British military history.

    Our armed forces displayed immense courage, dedication and restraint in upholding democracy and the rule of law in Northern Ireland. We should not forget that over 1,000 members of the security forces lost their lives, and many thousands more were injured, for that cause. Nor should we forget that the security situation in Northern Ireland had been deteriorating steadily since 1969.

    As Lord Saville outlines in Volume 1 of the report, those who lost their lives included two RUC officers, Sergeant Peter Gilgunn and Constable David Montgomery, killed by the IRA three days before Bloody Sunday. They were the first police officers killed in the city during the Troubles.

    Without the security forces, the peace process would not have happened. We owe an enormous debt of gratitude to those who served in Northern Ireland.

    Mr Speaker, the hurt and suffering that victims of the Troubles from all parts of the community continue to feel must be recognised and acknowledged. Finding a way of dealing with the painful legacy of the past is one of the great challenges facing Northern Ireland today.

    Our approach to the conclusions of reviews and reports in individual cases is clear.

    Where wrongdoing or failings by the state are clearly identified the government will accept responsibility and apologise. We have demonstrated this in our rapid response to this report; to the Police Ombudsman’s report on Claudy published in August; and to the Billy Wright Inquiry Report published in September.

    More widely there cannot, of course, be a Saville-type inquiry for each person killed during the Troubles. But there are ongoing processes that are helping to provide some answers. The Historical Enquiries Team is investigating all 3,268 deaths in Northern Ireland during the Troubles, including the deaths of soldiers and police officers who lost their lives.

    The 86% satisfaction rate that the HET is achieving amongst families who have received reports demonstrates the success it is having in helping to bring a measure of resolution.

    The Police Ombudsman continues to investigate legacy cases and there are a number of ongoing inquests relating to deaths from the Troubles.

    I welcome the very important work that the Northern Ireland Executive, the Victims Commissioners and many voluntary organisations are doing in providing healthcare and practical support to victims.

    The future of these processes is in the hands of the devolved administration.

    And for my part Iam fully supportive of the important and difficult work that the Independent Commission for the Location of Victims’ Remains continues to carry out.

    Our views on new public inquiries are, of course, well known. As my Rt. Hon. Friend the Prime Minister made clear there will be no more open-ended and costly inquiries.

    This is not a policy based solely on financial calculation. Continuing to pick out selective cases to subject to a lengthy public inquiry is not a viable approach to dealing with the legacy of a conflict that saw thousands of people from all parts of the community killed.

    And nor should we be under any illusion that public inquiries provide any guarantee of satisfaction for victims’ families.

    The Billy Wright Inquiry report showed that even an inquiry lasting six years and costing £30 million can be accused of not having answered critical questions. Many commentators pointed out that the report recorded the panel’s regret that they had no explanation for how the guns used to murder Billy Wright were smuggled into the high security Maze prison.

    But whilst our position on new inquiries is clear, we cannot simply shut down the past.

    I recognise that there are no easy answers. The previous government’s consultation on the Eames-Bradley report ended in October 2009 – we swiftly published the responses to that consultation in July this year.

    Those responses clearly showed that there is little consensus at present on a wider mechanism to address the past.

    But we have not let that stop us from continuing to listen to the views of people in Northern Ireland and to find a way forward.

    My Honourable Friend the Minister of State and I have met with victims groups, community organisations, academics and politicians from all parts of the community to move forward the debate on this important issue. We will continue to do so.

    Many different views have been expressed. But one clear theme does emerge from these discussions, and from the experience of existing mechanisms such as the HET. That is the desire of the families of victims of the Troubles to understand those traumatic events better. Helping families, and wider society, achieve that greater understanding and closure is vital, however difficult that may be.

    It will require leadership from all those involved in the events of the past 40 years – in Westminster, Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.

    I plan to continue exploring ideas on the contentious issues of the past over the coming months. Our approach will remain measured, sensitive and realistic.

    Lord Saville’s report closes a painful chapter in Northern Ireland’s troubled history. In so doing it makes an important contribution to helping Northern Ireland move forward to a genuinely shared future.

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Statement on Funding for Northern Ireland

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Statement on Funding for Northern Ireland

    The statement made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 21 October 2010.

    It has been alleged that the government has broken its word on committing to Northern Ireland ‘s £18 billion investment strategy as set out by the then Chancellor of the Exchequer in May 2007. This is completely untrue.

    In fact I can confirm again today that we believe sufficient funding has been made available for Northern Ireland to meet the £18 billion investment commitment in the time frame set out by the previous administration and on exactly the same basis.

    Critics of the government have exclusively focused on the reduction of 37% over four years in capital spending announced by George Osborne yesterday. I acknowledge this will not be easy but it is worth remembering that the previous government was actually committed to cuts of 50 per cent.

    Yet the key point is that current capital spending was only ever one part of the Investment Strategy agreed by Gordon Brown. As the Northern Ireland Executive’s own Investment Strategy makes clear, it always consisted of a number of elements, including loans under the Reform and Reinvestment Initiative.

    In confirming that we are on course to meet the £18 billion commitment, the Treasury has included the same elements as it did in 2007.

    The reality is that under this government, Northern Ireland will still be able to invest considerable sums in capital projects, if the Executive chooses to do so, over the next number of years.

    The Executive has flexibility over how it manages its budget, including the ability to use current spending (DEL) for capital projects.

    We also remain committed to the package for the devolution of policing and justice. We will ensure its terms are observed.

    In any event under the spending review we have given more favourable treatment to the Executive over carrying forward unspent money at the end of this financial year than any Whitehall department will have.

    Northern Ireland has a much better settlement than most Whitehall Departments. It is of course going to be tough. We have inherited the largest deficit in the G20 and the whole of the United Kingdom has to play its part in tackling it.

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Meeting Hillary Clinton

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Meeting Hillary Clinton

    The comments made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 18 October 2010.

    This is a very significant week for Northern Ireland. On Wednesday the Chancellor will announce measures to tackle the huge deficit that the coalition government inherited, the biggest in the G20. This will present challenges but it will also open up opportunities. The Coalition is determined to create the conditions for sustained economic growth. That can only be for the long term good of Northern Ireland.

    I will be doing everything in my power to help Northern Ireland attract inward investment and welcome the opportunity to discuss this and other issues with Secretary of State Clinton.

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Visit to the United States

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Visit to the United States

    The comments made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 1 October 2010.

    Wherever I went the same message was coming through loud and clear. The US is fully behind our efforts to work with the devolved administration to help Northern Ireland continue to progress towards long term political stability and economic growth.

    It was particularly encouraging to hear that those who try to thwart that progress will gain absolutely no traction in the United States.

    And support for Northern Ireland is not only in the form of warm words.

    Congressman Richie Neal assured me that he is confident that the US Congress will shortly vote through a further $15m a year for the next three years for the International Fund for Ireland which enables bodies like Co-Operation Ireland to do immensely valuable work in Northern Ireland.

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Statement on the Murder of Bobby Moffett

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Statement on the Murder of Bobby Moffett

    The statement made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, in the House of Commons on 15 September 2010.

    I have received the ]24th report of the Independent Monitoring Commission (IMC)](https://whitehall-admin.production.alphagov.co.uk/government/admin/publications/137656). This report has been made under Articles 4 and 7 of the International Agreement that established the Commission. It reports on the murder of Bobby Moffett in Belfast on 28 May 2010. I have considered the content of the Report and I am today laying it before Parliament.

    The IMC conclude that:

    The murder was committed by members of the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) acting as such;

    These members had sanction at central leadership level. The fact that there was no subsequent condemnation of the killing by the leadership means that the UVF has, in effect, adopted the consequences of the murder;

    There were 2 main reasons for the murder and the way in which it was committed: to stop Mr Moffett’s perceived flouting of UVF authority, and to send a message to the organisation and the community that this authority was not to be challenged;

    Senior leadership in the UVF could have prevented the murder had it determined to do so.

    In May 2007 the UVF issued a statement renouncing violence and committing to a process of transformation from a military to a civilian organisation. This was a major turning point for them. Last year they also took the step of decommissioning.

    The IMC observe that “the murder does not blind us to the progress the UVF has made hitherto or of itself mean that the process [of transformation] will be reversed. But it does call into question the reference in the May 2007 statement to becoming a civilian organisation and shows that when faced with what it saw as a challenge to its standing and authority, the organisation reverted to physical force”. The IMC go on to say that “If this murder is to mark the end of the use of physical force it will require a more profound change of culture and attitude by the leadership and the organisation.”

    The murder of Mr Moffett was brutal and shocking. The conclusions of the IMC in respect of the behaviour of the UVF leadership are a challenge to the UVF leadership to renew their determination to deliver fully on their collective commitment to transform their organisation.

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Centre for Social Justice Report

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Centre for Social Justice Report

    The comments made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 2 September 2010.

    This is a very timely and significant report by the Centre for Social Justice. It highlights that in tackling poverty Northern Ireland has much to learn from Great Britain, but Great Britain can also learn much from the excellent work being done in Northern Ireland. I have seen a great deal of this at first hand in opposition and now in government.

    The report also reinforces the need to move politics forward in Northern Ireland to focus on the mainstream issues that affect people in their daily lives. Many of the areas covered by the report are rightly devolved to the Northern Ireland Assembly. I trust that local politicians will find the report’s conclusions a positive contribution to promoting social justice and a shared future for all the people of Northern Ireland. As I have said many times, this is a team effort between the UK government, the devolved administration and those organisations that are key to delivering these objectives on the ground.

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Young Victims of Terrorism

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Young Victims of Terrorism

    The comments made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 4 August 2010.

    Anyone who meets victims of terrorism, especially young victims, cannot fail to be moved by the personal tragedy that they have suffered. But the contrast between the positive hope and inspiration of these young people and the emptiness of those who visited evil upon them could not be more stark.

    There are still a small number people in our community intent on creating more victims, as evidenced in Londonderry and Bangor this week. The young people of Project Common Bond put them to shame.

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Derry/Londonderry Becoming City of Culture

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Derry/Londonderry Becoming City of Culture

    The comments made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 15 July 2010.

    When I was in the City last week I was hugely impressed by the quality of the bid to become the UK’s first City of Culture.

    Those behind the bid have done a magnificent job and I congratulate them on this success.

    For those who call this great place Londonderry and for those who call it Derry, they can be as one in their pride in this huge achievement.

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Violence in Northern Ireland

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Violence in Northern Ireland

    The comments made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 13 July 2010.

    Along with Minister of State, Hugo Swire and Justice Minister David Ford, I watched events unfold late into the night before being briefed by the Chief Constable.

    The contrast between the restraint and professionalism of the police who were there to maintain law and order and the mob which attacked them could not have been greater.

    The Chief Constable and the Justice Minister should be justly proud of the incredibly brave men and women of the PSNI who held the line last night in the face of a sustained and violent assault.

    It is vital that local people come forward with information to help their police service with its investigation.

    The vast majority of gatherings pass off peacefully but there remain issues to be resolved around parading.

    Northern Ireland has come so far because locally elected, locally accountable representatives have found the political will to resolve difficulties that not so long ago seemed insoluble.

    I have no doubt that will be the case with parades.

    But there will be those who will try to exploit and create community tensions.

    They will not be allowed to put the future at risk.

  • Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Derry/Londonderry City of Culture Bid

    Owen Paterson – 2010 Comments on Derry/Londonderry City of Culture Bid

    The comments made by Owen Paterson, the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, on 9 July 2010.

    I am delighted to be here in the City today and reaffirm my full support for the UK City of Culture 2013 bid. In a City that boasts everything from the Undertones to Seamus Heaney, The Field Day Theatre Company, Dana, Phil Coulter and many others, a place that is home to talent, creativity, energy and strength the bid deserves every success. While some call it Londonderry and others Derry I’m sure what we want to learn is that this hugely impressive bid is successful next Thursday.