From the BBC:
“Bloody Sunday: Soldier F
anonymity order upheld in court”
(Thirteen people were killed and
15 wounded on Bloody Sunday)
Soldier F, the Army veteran
charged with murdering two men on Bloody Sunday, has been allowed to retain his
anonymity. On Monday a court heard that was because he would be a "prime
target for anyone seeking vengeance for the terrible events of Bloody
Sunday". He is charged with the murders of James Wray and William McKinney
in Londonderry on 30 January 1972. The ex-paratrooper also faces five charges
of attempted murder. Mr Wray and Mr McKinney were among 13 people shot dead at
a civil rights march in Derry's Bogside area almost 50 years ago. Giving
judgement on an application to review the former soldier's anonymity, the judge
said Soldier F had anonymity at both the Widgery and Saville inquiries into
Bloody Sunday and in respect of the criminal proceedings since September 2019. He
said threat assessments had been carried out in July 2019 and March 2021 and
those found that Soldier F was at low risk from dissident republicans. However,
the judge said that threat level could rise if Soldier F was to be denied
anonymity. The judge accepted the evidence of Alan McQuillan, a former
assistant chief constable of the Police Service Northern Ireland (PSNI), who
said that Soldier F "would have to look over his shoulder for the rest of
his life". The judge said that the former paratrooper faced a threat not
only from dissident republicans but "from a lone actor, not a member of
any organisation, but someone who might be prepared to carry out an
attack". He said a "real threat does exist" and Soldier F is
right to "feel genuine fear". The judge ordered that the anonymity
order should be maintained but said it would be reviewed before any trial that
should arise.
Thirteen people were killed and
15 wounded when members of the Army's Parachute Regiment opened fire on civil
rights demonstrators in Derry on Sunday 30 January 1972. The day became known
as Bloody Sunday. The Public Prosecution Service decided in March 2019 that
Soldier F, as he was known at the Bloody Sunday public inquiry, would be the
only ex-paratrooper to be charged. Mickey McKinney, who is the brother one of
the two people Soldier F is accused of murdering, said he was "very
disappointed" with the anonymity decision. "We are talking about open
justice here," he told BBC Radio Foyle. "Even when we focus just on
the [threat] risk assessment, the assessment goes from low to extremely
low," he said.
^ The British and the Northern
Irish Protestants continue to whitewash their crimes in Northern Ireland. From
1969-1998 they massacred many innocent men, women and children - simply because they were Catholic - and then
the British Military, the British Government in London, the RUC and others
officially covered-up their crimes and even blamed the victims themselves. The
Troubles may have officially ended in 1998, but the cover-up of justice
continues. 2021 is the 100th Anniversary of the British dividing
Ireland (creating Northern Ireland) and yet the sins and massacres of the past
100 years continue to be embraced and glorified. There can be no real justice
until an independent group (non-British, non-Protestant, non-Northern Irish)
comes in and looks at all the cases and cover-ups. Until that day the British
and the Northern Irish Protestants will continue to protect their own. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-northern-ireland-foyle-west-57550996
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