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Comment
Dealing With The OTRs
The vexed issue of how the British and Irish governments deal with the
question of the On the Run (OTR) members of the IRA and other paramilitary
groups has come front and centre in the past few weeks.
The debate has generated far more heat than light, unfortunately, and
it has made for strange bedfellows, with the British and Irish governments
lining up with Sinn Fein in their desire to put the issue to rest, and the
SDLP taking the side of the Unionists in saying that the methods proposed
would be detrimental to the peace process.
It is a convoluted issue, but several facts are clear. The question of
the OTRs was dealt with to the satisfaction of the various parties during
the exhaustive negotiations of the past few years. The British and Irish
governments now wish to implement those agreements on this issue.
Another fact is that there are two sides to this matter. The British
want all the OTRs to face a legal proceeding before they are free to return
and have their records absolved.
They also now seem to be proposing that members of their own security
forces, some of whom committed heinous crimes, would no longer be subject
to legal proceedings and partake in the proposed amnesty.
There is a critical difference on this issue for Nationalists. Their
OTRs would be subject to vetting and legal proceedings, while the other
side would avail of a general amnesty without any further investigation
of their offences.
It is this last point which has angered Nationalists, who see the British
forces getting off scot free. They point to the Truth Commission in South
Africa, which investigated every major crime on all sides, before all were
granted amnesty.
There is no question that it is past time that a line was drawn under
the era of violence in Northern Ireland. It is very unlikely there will
ever be criminal proceedings brought before courts in the North on any of
the unsolved and often brutal crimes committed on both sides over the 25
years or so of violence.
It is time for a fresh start, for the past to be buried and for a new
era to begin. But there must be parity on how all those offences are dealt
with.
Nationalists are correct in believing that singling out one side over
the other is unacceptable. It is hard to argue with that.
For their part, the British and Irish governments must ensure that the
issue is handled fairly, no easy task given the strong emotions.
Immigration Meeting
As we have been stating in these pages for the past few weeks, the era
of immigration reform is upon us again and the Irish must have their place
at the table.
We can all start this Friday night, December 9, at 7:30 p.m. at the Affinia
Hotel, at 31st Street and Seventh Avenue in Manhattan. There in the Clinton
room on the fourth floor, the first public meeting of the new group Irish
Lobby for Immigration Reform (ILIR) will take place.
We urge all those, undocumented and otherwise, to attend. There is only
a brief window of opportunity with all the immigration bills on the table,
and the young Irish, in particular, need to make their presence felt. It
is time to end the undocumented nightmare.
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