'Gazette' editorial criticises Bradley

THE CHURCH of Ireland primate, Archbishop Alan Harper, has dissociated himself “entirely” from an editorial in the current issue…

THE CHURCH of Ireland primate, Archbishop Alan Harper, has dissociated himself “entirely” from an editorial in the current issue of the Church of Ireland Gazette dealing with Northern Ireland issues.

It was dismissive of the Eames-Bradley Consultative Group on the Past (CGP) report.

The editorial described the recent appointment of Stormont special adviser Mary McArdle as “insensitive, not only because she had a part in the 1984 murder of the 23-year-old Mary Travers but also because Mary Travers was so brutally attacked coming with her parents, precisely, from Mass.”

It “highlighted again the issue of coming to terms with the past in Northern Ireland”, the editorial said. The editorial referred to a recent BBC Northern Ireland Sunday Sequence programme on which Denis Bradley and the Rev Lesley Carroll of the former consultative group were interviewed.

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It noted the Rev Carroll said then “that society had let the CGP’s report ‘sit there’ and stated that if she were doing the report again, she would not do anything differently. Mr Bradley said that increasingly people were now discussing the subject in a more ‘rational’ manner.”

It continued: “Contrary to Lesley Carroll’s view, society has not simply shelved the CGP report. It has rejected it.” Mr Bradley’s “rational” comment was “simply an affront to the public”.

Both “came across on the programme rather as spoilt children who had not got their way,” it said.

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry

Patsy McGarry is a contributor to The Irish Times