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Belfast police on high alert ahead of first ‘Supergrass’ trial since the 1980s

UVF leader to face murder charge on evidence provided by comrades


A UVF mural in the Shankill Road, Belfast
A UVF mural in the Shankill Road, Belfast
Photo by Google Images

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Northern Ireland police will mount a major security operation ahead of the province’s first ‘supergrass’ trial in a generation on Tuesday.

A total of 97 charges ranging from murder to blackmail await 14 UVF activists based on the confessions of two former members of the loyalist terrorist group.

Brothers David and Robert Stewart agreed to turn state’s evidence in return for reduced jail sentences.

The two, self-confessed members of the Ulster Volunteer Force, will testify against their former comrades in the biggest trial the North has seen in years.

Riot police are already on stand-by and separate courts will be used as officers bid to keep rival UVF factions apart during the trial.

All 14 accused belong to the Mount Vernon UVF, a notorious North Belfast terror unit heavily infiltrated by police.

Central to the case is the murder of Ulster Defence Association paramilitary Tommy English in October 2000.

According to the Guardian newspaper, the Belfast trial will hear accusations that some of those charged with English’s murder were police agents at the time of the killing.

English was the victim of a UVF-UDA feud when he was murdered at his home in Newtownabbey.

North Belfast UVF leader Mark Haddock is the chief suspect in the murder of English and was targeted by his own UVF group after he was also outed as a police informer.

Haddock had been housed at a secret location in England but was flown back to Belfast at the weekend and has remained in custody since his return.

The Stewart brothers, currently serving a prison sentence for aiding and abetting the killers of English, have supplied the bulk of the evidence against Haddock.

Police in Northern Ireland fear a major outbreak of UVF led violence around the trial, the first supergrass hearing since the 1980s.

Security sources have blamed the UVF for the outbreak of sectarian rioting in Belfast back in June and fear more of the same as the court case develops.

According to the Guardian, Loyalists have already staged protests against the trial which they claim is solely based on the evidence of paid perjurers, a phrase the UVF used in the 1980s against a number of witnesses in the supergrass trials.

A new group, called Families Against Supergrass Trials, has already put banners up across East Belfast accusing police of double standards. They also claim investigations are focused on loyalist rather than republican past crimes.

At the height of the first supergrass trials between 1982 and 1985, 25 men turned state’s evidence when Loyalist and republican informers put hundreds of suspects behind bars for dozens of murders.

Evidence from IRA supergrass Christopher Black saw 22 of his former comrades jailed for more than 4,000 years between them.

The supergrass system collapsed in 1985 after a judge ruled that another informer’s testimony was ‘unworthy’. Almost all of those who had been held on remand were freed.


Nster.com


15 Comments

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collusion, smithwick is doing his best to show that there was no collusion between the garda in dundalk & the murder of Harry Breen, b*llshite, there was, the cover up in denialibilty is breathtaking. The biggest collusion in the whole conflict was the decision of the FF Lynch govt in 69 to pass 'aid' to PIRA which they used to buy weapons & ensure that a new phase in the armed struggle would last another 30 years, the UVF bombed Dublin, they didn't need the 'brits' help, they had very proficient bomb makers - 2 who died in the Miami showband attack, another one ended up as leader of the PUP & was feted at political meetings North & South of the border, another served 25 years in the Maze for bar bombings in West belfast & was the chief suspect in the McGurk outrage
Can't see any ?? in yr posts??
nitpicking again Dan.Anwer the questions asked of you dan,have you got a problem with that?.
Seano – always getting the wrong end of the stick. eg on 23 Aug 07:48 you posted ‘Why ignore murder by orange gangs’, but when an ‘orange’ prosecution gets going, nothing positive to say?
Dan lynch clutching at red white and blue straws and ignoring the facts presented.Dan prefers rhetoric to truth.Should we thank the paras for showing a rare human side.Dan You would condemn nationalists to live in a pre-GFA world and condemn the IRA for freeing nationalists from a repressive regime.You continously shy away from the fact that what has been acheived was done so out of the barrel of a gun.Your failure to recognise this fact casts doubt on your Irishness.Be careful when you take the high moral ground it may be a mound of mud.
Who mentioned collusion? It would be more surprising if it didn’t happen. Republican terrorists' targets were often members or family of both the Security forces and loyalist gangs
maireadinmelb - Bernadette McAliskey was med-evacced in a British Army helicopter following the attack, and the nearby soldiers (Parachute Regiment) arrested the UDA gang involved. They could have turned their backs, as she would no doubt encourage her INLA buddies to do in a similar situation. Is it not ironic that her life was saved by guys who were hate figures of both her and her family?
The Melbourne Twins – Sean i Mairead - are you guys related? My point was, and is, that Seano adopts a ‘wait for the verdict’ stance when Republicans are on trial, but not for Loyalists.
Ask Bernadette Devlin about collusion when she was under surveillance by the british forces of occupation loyalist were able to break into her home and almost murder her! But no Dan, no collusion!!!! Wake up!!
Dan my friend maybe you should read the Stalker report and his book on how he was demonised by his government for daring to give an independent report.
Seano – do you recall writing ‘When a court finds someone guilty then I'll have my say, I don't deal in accusations and innuendo’? So is your post of Sep 05, 2011, 06:38 PM not a little premature?
UVF killing UDA? Let them continue to kill each other. Why the trials? And when they are done with each other maybe there would be peace in Ireland...........
And the british lied when they claimed there was no collusion between orange terrorists and the RUC/BA It was the worst kept secret of the last 30yrs.
I wonder why ciarai ??
Yeah, this makes me want to spend time in Belfast.
 




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