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Former British Prime Minister Edward Heath gives evidence
to Bloody Sunday tribunal
By Steve James
18 February 2003
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Former Conservative British Prime Minister Edward Heath gave
evidence to the Saville Tribunal hearings into the 1972 Bloody
Sunday massacre in Derry, Northern Ireland, in which 13 people
were murdered by the British Army.
Heath gave evidence for 11 days in January. His appearance
was only the second occasion in which a prime minister had been
hauled before such a legal tribunal to account for his actions
in power. Although the tribunal was set up as part of the Good
Friday Agreement to ease the integration of Sinn Fein into the
top echelons of Northern Ireland politics, it has accumulated
a huge amount of data on the massacre.
As with all the media reporting of the Saville Tribunal, Heaths
appearance was briefly and superficially reported in the press
then quickly dropped. Most commentary focussed on the theatrical
character of the occasion. It was held in Westminsters Methodist
Central Hall, with the 86-year-old Tory grandee pitting his years
of political guile and sulking bad temper against the lawyers
representing families of those killed.
Throughout his appearance, Heath insisted that he had no knowledge
of preparations to violently suppress the civil rights demonstration
planned for January 30, 1972. He, the tribunal was invited to
consider, was concerned solely for the well being of all the participants.
His intentions throughout were to reduce the political temperature
in Northern Ireland. He had no knowledge of discussions amongst
the top army brass to shoot unarmed demonstrators, no inkling
of any plans to use the notorious 1st Battalion of the Parachute
Regiment for an arrest operation, no clue as to the armys
intention to send troops into the Bogside area of Derrythen
a no go areaand no explanation for why 14 people
were killed. On the evening of 30 January, Heath pointed out that
he was entertaining the crew of his yacht and was thoroughly shocked
by the news emerging over the course of that evening from Derry.
Heath stuck to this line regardless of the deep contradictions
that emerged between his alternately stonewalling, blustering,
attempts at self justification, frequently absurd evidence and
the objective record of a mass of discussions and decisions obtained
by the tribunal from state papers, interviews, and statements
from numerous participants in events.
The tone was set by an initial discussion between Heath and
Christopher Clarke, a counsel for the tribunal. Clarke wanted
more information on Heaths attitude to comments made in
1971 by the then British Lord Chancellor, Quinton Hogg, later
Lord Hailsham. Hailsham was quoted by the British Armys
Chief of Staff, Lord Carver, in a 1994 TV interview as having
proposed in a 1971 cabinet committee (GEN47) meeting of the British
government that unarmed people obstructing the British Army in
Northern Ireland were enemies of the Crown and should be liable
to being shot. According to Heath, this was simply one of Hailshams
outbursts, and at the time people said well, that
was Quinton and ... we took no notice at all. Heath
refused to be drawn into examining the impact of Hailshams
views on the army.
Clarke also drew attention to Heaths requests for reports
on what would be the implications of seeking a purely military
solution in Northern Ireland. Heaths policy at the time
was to prop up the Protestant Ulster Unionist Northern Ireland
government in Stormont led by Northern Ireland Prime Minister
Brian Faulkner, pending a new settlement involving some sort of
power-sharing with the Catholic population. Part of this strategy
required the brutal repression of civil rights marches, the internment
without trial of hundreds of people suspected of being associated
with the IRA, many of whom were tortured, and increased military
pressure on the nationalist Irish Republican Army.
During the autumn of 1971 Faulkner requested more troops and
an offensive against the IRA, particularly in Derry, in the Bogside
and the Creggan. Around this time, General Robert Ford, the Commander
of Land Forces in Northern Ireland, drew up proposals for members
of the Derry Young HooligansCatholic youth who
regularly confronted armed soldiers and armoured cars with petrol
bombs and stonesto be shot. Heath denied he ever saw the
document, despite it being issued to Fords superior, General
Harry Tuzo, and despite Heaths requests to consider all
the options.
When pressed by lawyer Michael Lavery as to what he would have
thought had he seen Fords document, Heath refused to answer
a hypothetical question. Asked why Ford was not drummed
out of the British Army Heath retorted, I am not responsible
for discipline in the British Army. He refused to explain
why no-one in the British Army has ever been brought to account
for Bloody Sunday, either for murder, or for breaking the army
regulations covering the use of weaponsthe Yellow Card.
Throughout his evidence Heath insisted that day to day operational
control of the army, including all aspects of its planning for
the 30 January march, was in the hands of the military themselves.
He would not expect to have been told of any aspect of their preparations.
But considerable detail emerged to contradict this. For example,
on 27 January, a telex was sent from Heaths press secretary,
Donald Maitland stating, this morning ministers discussed
the public relations aspects of the coming weekends marches
and particularly Sundays in Londonderry. The telex
went on to call for maximum TV coverage to be organised at the
point where the march was broken up and arrests made. The next
day, Maitland sent another telex to Belfast asking for a public
statement to be issued prior to the march.
This warned:
(A) All responsible citizens of Londonderry should keep
off the streets
(B) The Security Forces will use minimum force
(C) The Security Forces will take the measures which the
tactical situation requires
(D) They will do everything possible to minimise inconvenience
to peaceful citizens.
The purpose of the chilling statement was to prepare
public opinion here and in Northern Ireland for violent scenes
on TV following the march. Asked to explain whether there
was any discussion in the GEN47 cabinet committee on the use of
guns against demonstrators, Heaths memory failed him.
Simultaneous with the GEN47 discussion was a meeting of the
Joint Security Committee in Belfast. The minutes of this meeting
noted that the army intended to stop the civil rights march and
the operation might will develop into rioting and even a
shooting war. Heath denied he had any knowledge of this.
A transcript of a phone call between Heath and Irish premier,
Jack Lynch, was read. In the call, Heath claims, in the face of
Lynchs protests about the massacre, that the fault lay with
the people who deliberately organised this march, in circumstances
which we all know, in which the IRA were bound to intervene....
Heath calls on Lynch to condemn the organisers. The significance
of Heaths remark that the IRA were bound to intervene flies
in the face of his assertion that he knew nothing of plans for
the day, nor of discussion held amongst the army top brass of
a shooting war. Half way through his testimony, more cabinet papers
were released including a handwritten manuscript which noted Lord
Carver as informing GEN47, with Heath present, that the IRA will
seek max publicity and this may provoke a Protestant
counter action. Heath also approved the Armys plans to deal
with the march and warned that NICRA [the Northern Ireland
Civil Rights Association] were being taken over by IRA and hooligans.
The IRA did not intervene on the day, nor had they a practice
of using large demonstrations as cover. Those killed by the army
were for the next two decades routinely and falsely accused by
the British government of being IRA members until Tory Prime Minister
John Major was eventually forced to concede that they were neither
armed nor in the IRA.
Information also came to light on the Widgery Inquiry, set
up by Heath in the aftermath of Bloody Sunday. This was first
discussed on the evening of 30 January. Days later, when appointing
Lord Widgery to chair the tribunal, Heath warned him that the
morale of the army was at stake, and to remember that a propaganda
war was being fought. The Widgery Inquiry, pushed through
in record time, whitewashed the army and no prosecutions or even
criticism emerged from it beyond concern over some reckless
firing. The government considered giving soldiers immunity from
prosecution, but in the end rejected this because, according to
a document from 5 February, and in the words of Lord Carver, there
was little danger of a soldier being prosecuted anyway.
Heath denied that immunity from prosecution was government policy.
Pressed on whether a prosecution for murder would be bad for morale,
Heath simply noted that murder was a crime that would be dealt
with by army regulations.
To expose the implausibility of Heaths stated lack of
knowledge of any preparations for Bloody Sunday, counsel Michael
Lavery introduced a 1983 interview between General Ford and a
journalist, Desmond Hammill. Ford was asked about plans in 1972
for Operation Motorman, the seizure of the no-go areas
which eventually went ahead in July 1972. Ford described briefing
Heath, William Whitelaw, Lord Carrington, Lord Carver and General
Tuzo. According to Ford, Heath asked him how many casualties were
expected. Ford realised he had no idea, but claimed that there
might well be up to one hundred dead and wounded. Heath authorised
the operation. Asked for recollections of the discussion, Heath,
predictably, had none.
In the end, perhaps the most convincing pointer to the direct
responsibility borne by the Heath administration is the lack of
any prosecutions or disciplinary action, even now, 31 years after
the event, of any soldier, or general, directly involved in Bloody
Sunday. Every one of them is well aware that they have the defence
that they were acting under orders, and any prosecutions would
trigger a mass of revelations that would be as politically damaging
for the current Labour government as they would be for the Conservative
party that was then in power.
See Also:
Britain: Conservative government
considered "forcible resettlement" of Northern Ireland
in 1972
[11 January 2003]
Britain: Military
testimony indicates Bloody Sunday cover-up
[31 December 2002]
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