18/04/2003

Full investigation not the answer says Trimble

While Northern Ireland's nationalist population have begun to put pressure on the Government to introduce a full judicial inquiry into collusion following the Steven's Report, some remain sceptical that such an investigation would help.

Ulster Unionist leader David Trimble was among the first to publicly reject calls for a full investigation and instead claimed that the all-party Parliamentary Intelligence Committee, which sits in private, could examine what happened.

In an interview with BBC Radio 4 Today programme, Mr Trimble said the last thing anyone wanted was "another full judicial inquiry when we see what is happening in terms of the time and money that has been expended elsewhere".

"Yes there has been investigation, a lot of that investigation necessarily has been kept as it were private. There are still paramilitary organisations in existence, there are still people, informants, in that.

"Are the SDLP suggesting that we should now bring all that into the open?

"Particularly when these organisations are still active and there is still a need to penetrate them in order to restrain their continuing illegal activities," he added.

DUP Policing spokesperson, Ian Paisley Jnr, also hit out at Sir John Steven's Report. He said: "It is time to draw a line under this matter. There was a war against terrorism being fought everyday in Northern Ireland. I have no doubt that mistakes have been made on the fringes of this war but to investigate allegations to a point of exhaustion and then investigate them some more when they cannot be proven is just pointless and stinks of cheap political point scoring."

However the most enduring comment of the day came from the family of one of the victims who is believed to have been killed as a result of collusion.

Ivy Lambert, mother of 19-year-old student, Adam Lambert, who was killed a day after the Enniskillen Poppy Day bombing, apparently as an act of revenge, has said she does not want an inquiry.

Commenting on the news coverage which has brought back vivid memories of her son's murder, she said: "It brings it all back but we sort of already knew what would come out and it doesn't bother us.

"We have always supported the police and the security forces and we don't see any reason to change that position now. I'm sure mistakes were made but it's not the police's fault, it's the people who shot him.

"We have moved on and got on with our lives, and that is what Adam would have wanted."

(MB)

Related Northern Ireland News Stories
Click here for the latest headlines.

21 November 2024
Man Dies After Bus Fall In Belfast
Detectives are investigating the death of an 80-year-old man who fell from a bus in Belfast. Police have said that they believe the man was travelling on a 2J Translink Metro bus service at around 11:15am on Friday, 08 November, when he suffered a fall as the bus travelled along Royal Avenue, near it's junction with North Street.
18 November 2024
Pedestrian Dies Following Road Traffic Collision Ikn West Belfast
A female pedestrian in her 70s has tragically died following a road traffic collision in west Belfast on Saturday, 9th November. The incident occurred on Hannahstown Hill shortly after 6:50pm when two pedestrians were struck by a vehicle. Emergency services attended the scene, and the injured pedestrians were taken to hospital.
08 August 2022
Murder Investigation Launched Into Disappearance Of Damien Heagney
The PSNI's Major Investigation Team have launched a murder investigation into the disappearance of 47-year-old Damien Heagney from Cookstown. Mr Heagney was reported missing on Tuesday 19 July and police have said that they are "keeping an open mind" they now believe that he has been murdered.
15 May 2018
Two People Killed In Offaly Plane Crash Named
Two people killed in a plane crash in Co Offaly have been named as pilot Niall Bowditch and seven year old Kacper Kacprzak. Mr Bowditch was believed to be in his 40s, and from Staffordshire, England. It is thought Kacper was the son of a Polish national living in Dublin. The plane took off from Clonbullogue Airfield on Sunday, 13 May.
27 February 2013
Bomb Alert Was Hoax Says PSNI
A bomb alert in Newtownabbey has been declared a hoax. PSNI have described the security alert as an "elaborate hoax". The M5, was closed in both directions from Hazelbank to Doagh Road, on Tuesday night. All roads have re-opened.