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House Committee Approves Finucane Resolution Smith-authored resolution calls for investigation of collusion |
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WASHINGTON, D.C. – The day after the release of a devastating report detailing collusion between a Protestant paramilitary organization and police in Northern Ireland, the U.S. House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee today approved a resolution introduced by U.S. Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ) calling on the government of the of the United Kingdom to begin a full “independent public judicial” investigation of the murder of Northern Ireland defense attorney Pat Finucane. “Pat Finucane was a courageous human rights activist and a loving father and husband. It is imperative that the questions surrounding Mr. Finucane’s murder are answered in order to restore full confidence in the rule of law in the north of In 1989, Patrick Finucane, a human rights attorney, was gunned down in his home in Among other things, Smith’s resolution specifically calls on the British government to “reconsider its position on the matter of an inquiry into the murder of Mr. Finucane, to amend the Inquiries Act of 2005, and to take fully into account the objections…raised by the Finucane family.” Smith’s resolution—H.Con.Res. 20—is now cleared for consideration by the House of Representatives. “For years, numerous international bodies and nongovernmental human rights organizations have raised allegations that Mr. Finucane’s murder resulted from collusion between loyalist paramilitaries and British security forces,” Smith said during the Committee’s consideration of the resolution. “In 2004, retired Canadian Supreme Court Judge Peter Cory, who was appointed by the Governments of Ireland and the United Kingdom to examine these allegations under the Weston Park Agreement, reported that sufficient evidence of collusion existed to warrant a full, independent and public judiciary inquiry without delay. Unfortunately, the British government has yet to comply.” In 2001, as part of the Weston Park Agreement and in an attempt to help jump start the stalled Good Friday Agreement, the British and Irish governments pledged to follow Cory’s recommendation. After public release of the Cory report in 2004, the Smith—who has held eleven hearings on the peace process in “During Congressional hearings, the one theme that kept recurring was the ongoing concern about human rights abuses by members of the police service in The report released yesterday by the police ombudsman is the culmination of a three-year investigation. It details collusion between “A stumbling block to greater acceptance of the police by the community has been that the charges of official collusion in the murders of people such as Mr. Finucane remain unresolved. People are hesitant to move forward if they are not confident that those guilty of abuses will be held accountable. As I have emphasized in other areas of conflict, there can be no peace without justice,” said Smith. | ||
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| For Immediate Release: January 23, 2007 Contact: Patrick Creamer (202) 225-3765 |
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