Westminster urged to ‘call time’ on flawed legacy Bill

Westminster urged to ‘call time’ on flawed legacy Bill

5 years ago Members News

The Police Federation for Northern Ireland has asked Westminster to ‘call time’ on draft legislation to deal with the legacy of the past.

Addressing the Northern Ireland Affairs Committee, PFNI Chair, Mark Lindsay, told MPs that what was being suggested was flawed, perverse and offensive.

Mr Lindsay told the Committee: “We look to Westminster to call time on this Draft Bill in its entirety. Far from resolving issues, this proposed legislation will merely perpetuate the suffering of all innocent victims and their families, with the very real prospect that there will be no closure or answers possible.”

Mr Lindsay set out the Federation’s opposition to the creation of a Historical Investigations Unit (HIU), describing it as a parallel police service. Instead, a properly resourced PSNI should be given the task of investigating historical cases.

He also criticised the absence of any form of financial assistance for serving and former officers who might have to fund their own legal defences when complainants could avail of limitless Legal Aid.

M Lindsay said: “This clearly discriminates against former and serving officers. The absence of a financial mechanism to support costly legal defences in respect of the ‘tsunami’ of allegations that will inevitably follow is a shocking denial that should never have been included in this draft legislation.”

Mr Lindsay continued: “Legacy has drifted from well-established criminal justice principles and with the proposed offence of non-criminal police misconduct, there is the real potential for serving or retired officers to be investigated for something which isn’t even a crime, and for which there is no definition, whilst others are not held to account for some of the most heinous crimes, including murder.

“We also see the Bill as perverse because the proposals run the risk of equating the actions of murderers and bombers with the actions of those who worked to bring them to justice and create the conditions for peace.

“It is offensive as it could allow the terrorist to tell their story without fear of sanction or prosecution, delivering a one-sided narrative where their actions could be explained as somehow justified.”

The PFNI Chair went on to say that there seemed to be an intention to rewrite the history of 35 years of a terrorist campaign, equating the actions of the terrorist groupings to the lawful actions of police officers.

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