SF blames UK forPoppy Day silence
The party made the comments after UUP MP Tom Elliott told MPs in London that the Deputy First Minister could help bring clarity on the IRA Poppy Day bombing but “is not prepared to do so”.
The IRA bomb killed 11 people in November 1987 and Libya supplied huge volumes of Semtex and other weapons to the IRA during the Troubles.
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Hide AdSpeaking in a debate on Libyan sponsored IRA terrorism in Westminster, Mr Elliott said he believes the Deputy First Minister could provide details on the country’s links to the atrocity - but has chosen not to.
Fermanagh and South Tyrone MP Mr Elliott said: “I believe that there are people out there who could help that investigation in identifying some aspects about the weapons and support that came from Libya. Some of those people are very senior in the Northern Ireland Executive now. Indeed, I believe that the Deputy First Minister, Martin McGuinness, could give support, help and assistance, but it appears that he is not prepared to do so.
“If we are going to deal with the past and aspects relating to Libya, Martin McGuinness and his colleagues need to come out and be absolutely clear on where they stood, what they have done in the past, and how they assisted. I want to see progress on that.”
The News Letter put Mr Elliott’s comments to Sinn Fein. A party spokesman agreed that “victims of the conflict and their families have a right to the truth about the past.
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Hide Ad“However, it is the British government who are causing the delay by insisting on the continued cover-up of British state murder and collusion through the use of a bogus ‘national security’ veto on disclosure.
“The British government must honour their commitments from the Stormont House Agreement and offer maximum disclosure to victims and families.
“This latest contribution by Tom Elliot however comes straight from the Gregory Campbell school of stunt politics and is the latest example of a unionist MP trying desperately to be relevant from their retirement home in Westminster.”
Earlier this week Mr Campbell said he has complained to the Police Ombudsman that the PSNI failed to interview Mr McGuinness about Bloody Sunday, even though the Saville Inquiry found he was “probably” armed with a sub machine gun and had been an IRA commander at the time.