Army witnesses to suspected shoot-to-kill in Derry unwilling to make statements

Derry Republicans Daniel Doherty and William Fleming were shot by soldiers in 1984

Lord Justice Weir: “Why would someone with nothing to hide have any reluctance to speak to a police officer?”
Lord Justice Weir: “Why would someone with nothing to hide have any reluctance to speak to a police officer?”

Army witnesses who could help an inquest into a suspected SAS shoot-to-kill in the grounds of a Co Derry hospital are unwilling to make statements, lawyers have claimed.

A senior judge said anybody with nothing to hide should have no problem giving their version of events to police.

Daniel Doherty (23) and William Fleming (19) died in the vicinity of Gransha Hospital, Derry in December 1984.

It has been alleged the republicans, who were from Derry, were planning to attack an off-duty member of the British Army’s Ulster Defence Regiment when soldiers, believed to be from the SAS, ambushed them, firing almost 60 shots.

READ SOME MORE

"Why would someone with nothing to hide have any reluctance to speak to a police officer?" asked Lord Justice Weir. "What is wrong with sending a police officer to meet these people by appointment and take a statement from them?"

He told a Belfast review hearing on Tuesday that he found it odd that in some cases soldiers were prepared to make a statement to the ministry of defence, but not the police and claimed it was absurd to have the ministry, as an interested party in the case, conduct the interviews.

“I don’t think it is satisfactory; if there are statements available for people who were closer to the action surely there could be statements obtained from people who were not as close to the action.

“This is a case that is going to be suggested that these people were deliberately shot and it was part of some policy. Why would anybody, as somebody whose conduct was going to be called into question, use its own employees to take statements from witnesses?”

Peter Coll QC, barrister for the ministry of defence, said they were working on the issue. “These individuals have, I accept through the MoD liaison people, communicated a reluctance, however it is done. If these individuals are to be witnesses it is difficult to see how they can be witnesses without having provided statements in advance.”

An inquest was held two years after the shootings, but in 2010 Northern Ireland attorney general John Larkin QC ordered another hearing after finding that police documents had been withheld from the coroner at the time.