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{{Short description|1971 pub bombing in Belfast, Northern Ireland}} | |||
The first major atrocity of ] ocurred on the ] ], when a large bomb exploded in the doorway of a Catholic Bar names "McGurk's" on North Queen Street in belfast, collapsing the building and killing fifteen people. In spite of increasing tensions and violence in ], this was the first major attack on civilians by either side, and was the precursor for many simlar atrocities. Following the attack, riots and fighting broke out across Belfast, and over a dozen people were injured, including several soldiers and police. | |||
{{Use British English|date=August 2011}} | |||
{{Infobox civilian attack | |||
| title = McGurk's Bar bombing | |||
| partof = ] | |||
| image = McGurks bombing.jpg | |||
| caption = A British soldier surveys the aftermath of the bombing | |||
| location = Corner of North Queen Street and Great George's Street, ],<br>] | |||
| coordinates = {{Coord|54|36|26.7|N|05|55|49.7|W|region:GB_scale:5000|display=inline,title}} | |||
| date = 4 December 1971 | |||
| time = 20:45 | |||
| timezone = GMT | |||
| target = ] | |||
| type = ] | |||
| fatalities = 15 | |||
| injuries = 17 | |||
| perps = | |||
| perp = ] (UVF) | |||
| susperps = | |||
| susperp = | |||
| weapons = | |||
}} | |||
{{Campaignbox Northern Ireland Troubles|state=collapsed}} | |||
On 4 December 1971, the ] (UVF), an ] paramilitary group, detonated a bomb at McGurk's Bar in ], ], frequented by ]s–]s.<ref>{{Cite news |title=Daughter recalls bar bomb horror |work=BBC News (3 December 2001) |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/northern_ireland/1683058.stm |access-date=6 May 2008 |date=3 December 2001}}</ref> The explosion caused the building to collapse, killing fifteen Catholic civilians—including two children—and wounding seventeen more. It was the deadliest attack in Belfast during ].<ref name="mult">{{Cite book |last=Taylor |first=Peter |author-link=Peter Taylor (Journalist) |title=Loyalists |publisher=] |year=1999 |isbn=0-7475-4519-7 |page=88}}</ref> | |||
Despite evidence to the contrary, the British security forces asserted that a bomb had exploded prematurely while being handled by ] (IRA) members inside the pub, implying that the victims themselves were partly to blame. A report later found that the ], the police force in Northern Ireland at the time, were biased in favour of this view and that this hindered their investigation. The victims' relatives allege that the security forces deliberately spread ] to discredit the IRA. In 1977, UVF member Robert Campbell was sentenced to life imprisonment for his part in the bombing and served fifteen years.<ref></ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.irishnews.com/news/2014/05/01/news/man-arrested-over-1971-mcgurk-s-pub-bombing-90394/ |title=Man arrested over 1971 McGurk's pub bombing |website=The Irish News|date=May 2014 }}</ref> | |||
Initial police speculation was that ] members had either planted the device as part of an internal feud between the ] and the ], or that the bombers had stopped off for a drink in the pub, and their bomb had accidentally detonated. This theory meant that the explosion was never properly investigated at the time. | |||
The bombing sparked a series of tit-for-tat bombings and shootings by loyalists and ], which contributed to making 1972 the bloodiest year of the conflict. | |||
In fact, the IRA had nothing to do with the attack, which was committed by members of the ], a ] paramilitary organisation. They had actually been seen setting the bomb and had claimed the bombing the follwoing day, but were steadfastly ignored by investigators. Seven years after the attack Robert Campbell, a self professed UVF member, admitted being the getaway driver for the team who set the bomb, as well as an unrelated sectarian murder. He recieved fifteen life sentences, but due to the seven year delay in evidence collection, nobody else has ever been arrested in connection with the attack. | |||
==Background== | |||
Today the site of McGurk's bar is now a memorial to those who lost their lives, but the community of the ] area have demanded fresh inquires, many insisting that British security forces knew of the attack, or even participated in it. | |||
{{see|Timeline of the Northern Ireland Troubles and peace process}} | |||
Tramore Bar, commonly called McGurk's Bar, was a two-storey ] on the corner of North Queen Street and Great George's Street, in the ] area to the north of Belfast city centre.<ref>{{cite report |url=https://www.policeombudsman.org/PONI/files/8b/8b63d4ea-7575-4015-b9bf-1548536a9f2f.pdf |title=Public Statement by the Police Ombudsman under Section 62 of the Police (Northern Ireland) Act 1998 relating to the complaint by the relatives of the victims of the Bombing of McGurks's Bar, Belfast on 4 December 1971. |first=Al |last=Hutchinson |date=February 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140401030319/http://www.policeombudsman.org/Publicationsuploads/McGurk%27s---Final-Report.pdf |archive-date=1 April 2014 |page=2}}</ref> This was a mainly ] and Catholic neighbourhood, and the pub's regular customers were from the community.<ref name="BBCOTD"/> The pub was owned by Patrick and Philomena McGurk, who lived on the upper floor with their four children.<ref>Police Ombudsman's Report, p.2</ref> | |||
The ] (UVF) was formed in Belfast in 1966, declaring "war" on the ] (IRA).<ref name="Bardon">{{Cite book |title=A History Of Ulster |author=Jonathan Bardon |year=2005 |page= |isbn=0-85640-764-X |quote="From this day we declare war against the IRA and its splinter groups. Known IRA men will be executed mercilessly and without hesitation" |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/historyofulster00jona/page/635}}</ref> Until 1971, however, its actions were few and it "scarcely existed in an organisational sense".<ref>Encyclopedia of British and Irish political organizations''. Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000. p.259</ref> The ] was deployed in Northern Ireland following the ], which are usually seen as the start of ]. In December 1969 the IRA split into two factions: the ] and ]. Both launched armed campaigns against the British Army, the ] (RUC) and the ]. | |||
==The Dead== | |||
The fifteen victims of the McGurk's Bar bombing. | |||
During 1971, the violence gradually worsened. There were daily bombings and shootings by republicans, loyalists and the security forces. During the first two weeks of December, there were about 70 bombings and about 30 people were killed.<ref>Police Ombudsman's Report, p.14</ref> On 2 December, three republican prisoners escaped from ], not far from McGurk's. Security was tightened and there was a heavy RUC and British Army presence in the area over the next two days.<ref name="Police Ombudsman's Report, p.9">Police Ombudsman's Report, p.9</ref> Eyewitnesses asserted that the checkpoints around McGurk's were removed just an hour before the attack.<ref>Police Ombudsman's Report, p.16</ref> | |||
*Francis Bradley, 61 | |||
*John Colton, 49 | |||
*James Cromie, 13 | |||
*Philip Garry, 75 | |||
*Kathleen Irvine, 53 | |||
*Edward Kane, 29 | |||
*Thomas Kane, 49 | |||
*Edward Keenan, 69 | |||
*Sarah Keenan, 58 | |||
*Marie McGurk, 14 (Owner's Daughter) | |||
*Philomena McGurk, 46 (Owner's Wife) | |||
*Thomas McLaughlin, 55 | |||
*David Milligan, 52 | |||
*James Smyth, 58 | |||
*Robert Spotswood, 38 | |||
==Bombing== | |||
] | |||
On the evening of Saturday 4 December 1971, a four-man UVF team met in the ] area of Belfast and were ordered to bomb a pub on North Queen Street. According to the only convicted bomber—Robert Campbell—they were told not to return until the job was done.<ref name="omb44">Police Ombudsman's report, pp.44–45</ref> Campbell said that their target had not been McGurk's, but another pub nearby.<ref name="omb76">Police Ombudsman's report, p.76</ref> It is believed this was a pub called The Gem, which was allegedly linked to the Official IRA.<ref name="mcaleese">McAleese, Deborah. . '']'', 9 July 2010. Retrieved 9 December 2012.</ref><ref name="Hansard 2"> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304001100/http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200708/cmhansrd/cm080714/debtext/80714-0018.htm |date=4 March 2016 }}, ''Hansard'', 14 July 2008. Retrieved 4 November 2009</ref> The {{convert|50|lb|kg}} bomb was disguised as a brown parcel, which they placed in a car and drove to their target. Campbell says they stopped near The Gem at about 7:30 pm,<ref name="omb44"/> but could not gain access to it because there were security guards outside.<ref name="omb76"/> After waiting for almost an hour, they drove a short distance to McGurk's.<ref name="mcaleese"/> At about 8:45 pm, one of them placed the bomb in the ] entrance on Great George's Street and rushed back to the car.<ref name="omb44"/> It exploded just moments after they drove off.<ref name="omb44"/> Campbell implied that McGurk's had been chosen only because it was "the nearest Catholic pub".<ref name="omb76"/><ref name="Hansard 2"/> | |||
The blast caused the building to collapse. Bystanders immediately rushed to free the dead and wounded from the rubble. Firefighters, paramedics, police and soldiers were quickly on the scene. Fifteen Catholic civilians had been killed—including two children<ref name="sutton">{{dead link|date=July 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}. ''CAIN''.</ref>—and a further seventeen wounded. The rescue effort lasted many hours. | |||
] | |||
Within two hours of the blast, a sectarian clash had erupted nearby at the New Lodge–Tiger's Bay ].<ref name=mckittrick127>McKittrick, David. ''Lost Lives: The stories of the men, women and children who died as a result of the Northern Ireland Troubles''. Mainstream, 1999. p.127.</ref> The British Army and RUC moved in and a gun battle developed.<ref name=mckittrick127/> A British Army officer, Major Jeremy Snow, was shot by the IRA on New Lodge Road and died of his wounds on 8 December.<ref name=mckittrick127/><ref> {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160422085336/http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/chron/1971.html |date=22 April 2016 }}. ''CAIN''.</ref> Two RUC officers and five civilians were also wounded by gunfire. Eventually, five companies of troops were sent into the district and they searched almost 50 houses.<ref name=mckittrick127/> | |||
Meanwhile, the UVF team had driven to a nearby pickup point where they dumped their car. They walked to the area of ] and were picked up by another. They were driven back to the Shankill and met the man who had ordered the attack in an ], telling him that "the job has been done".<ref name="omb44"/> | |||
Among those killed were Philomena and Maria McGurk, wife and 14-year-old daughter of the pub owner Patrick McGurk. Patrick and his three sons were seriously injured.<ref name="BBCOTD">{{Cite news |title=1971: Bomb demolishes crowded Belfast pub |work=BBC On This Day |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/december/4/newsid_3403000/3403883.stm |access-date=6 May 2008 |date=4 December 1971}}</ref> In a television statement shortly afterwards, McGurk asked that there be no retaliation: "It doesn't matter who planted the bomb. What's done can't be undone. I've been trying to keep bitterness out of it."<ref Name="BT">{{Cite news |title=McGurk bar owner dies |work=Belfast Telegraph (17 December 2007) |url=http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/news/mcgurk-bar-owner-dies-28070889.html |access-date=29 September 2015}}</ref> | |||
==Investigation== | |||
===Responsibility=== | |||
After the bombing, the media reported various theories about who was responsible. The main theories were: | |||
*that it had been planted by loyalists; | |||
*that it had exploded prematurely while being prepared by IRA members inside the pub; | |||
*that it had exploded prematurely while "in transit", an IRA member having left it in the pub to be collected by another IRA member; and | |||
*that it had been planted as part of a feud between the Provisional IRA and Official IRA. | |||
The security forces promoted the idea that it was an IRA bomb which exploded prematurely (an "]").<ref name="Hansard 2"/> Survivors and relatives denied this. They said the pub was not associated with the IRA and there had been no suspicious people or activity in the pub that night. An ] document from December 1971 also said that the pub was not known to have IRA associations.<ref name="omb42"/> On 6 December, both wings of the IRA condemned the attack,<ref name="BBCOTD"/> denied responsibility and blamed the UVF and security forces.<ref name="omb42">Police Ombudsman's report, p.42</ref> | |||
====Claims of responsibility==== | |||
That same day, several newspapers received telephone calls from someone claiming to be a spokesman for the "Empire Loyalists". Their statement to the '']'' was:<blockquote>We accept responsibility for the destruction of McGurk's pub. We placed 30lb of new explosives outside the pub because we had proved beyond doubt that meetings of IRA Provisionals and Officials were held there.<ref name="omb2728">Police Ombudsman's report, pp.27–28</ref></blockquote> The "Empire Loyalists" had made only one other claim of responsibility; for bombing a community centre on 12 November.<ref name="omb2728"/> The RUC, however, had no intelligence about such a group;<ref name="omb2728"/> suggesting that it may have been a covername. | |||
On Tuesday 7 December, a youth claimed to have seen a man acting oddly at a phone kiosk the night before. He said the man was wearing a jacket with a UVF badge on it. The youth claimed to have checked the kiosk after the man left and found a torn bit of paper. When put together, it included the lines:<blockquote>We the Empire Loyalists wish to state that we did not destroy McGurk's public house as an act of retaliation ... Furthermore we do not require the forensic experts of the Army to cover up for us ... We shall not issue any further statements until we exterminate another rebel stronghold.<ref name="omb2728"/></blockquote> | |||
In the days following the bombing, the RUC received a letter signed by "Chief of Staff, UVF" claiming that the UVF bombed the pub because an IRA meeting was due to take place there. It said that two UVF members entered the pub, had a drink and asked the barman to mind a package while they "ran an errand".<ref name="omb37">Police Ombudsman's report, p.37</ref> Witnesses told the RUC, however, that there had been no strangers in the pub and that nobody had left a package.<ref name="omb37"/> Three other unsigned letters were sent to the RUC, claiming it was an IRA bomb "in transit" and that two IRA members were killed.<ref name="omb37"/> | |||
====Location of the bomb==== | |||
] | |||
For the RUC, the location of the bomb (whether it exploded inside or outside) became the key to finding who was responsible. However, investigators (both RUC and British Army) were unsure and gave conflicting opinions.<ref name="omb2021">Police Ombudsman's report, pp.20–21</ref> | |||
RUC duty officers' reports were made daily. Their purpose was to brief the Chief Constable and others at HQ about events that had happened that day. The reports were also made available to the British Army's General Officer Commanding for Northern Ireland. The 4–5 December 1971 report said of the bombing: "Just before the explosion a man entered the licensed premises and left down a suitcase, presumably to be picked up by a known member of the IRA. The bomb was intended for use on other premises. Before the 'pick-up' was made the bomb exploded".<ref name="omb2021"/> The origin of this information could not be established.<ref name="omb2021"/> | |||
On 6 December, however, the RUC took a witness statement from an 8-year-old boy. He said that a car had stopped outside the pub with four men inside and "a wee ] stuck in the back window". He said one left a package in the Great George's Street doorway and ran back to the car, which sped off just moments before the package exploded. A man and a woman backed up his story, although they did not witness as much as the boy.<ref name="omb2425">Police Ombudsman's report, pp.24–25</ref> | |||
Despite this, the security forces and the government stood behind the "own goal" theory. A ] document covering the period 8–15 December said: "It has been confirmed that it was a bomb which was destined for another target, but exploded prematurely."<ref name="omb42"/> A ] (MOD) document dated 14 December said that this "should be publicised".<ref name="omb49">Police Ombudsman's report, p.49</ref> On 23 December, the British Army sent a letter (signed by a lieutenant colonel) to people living in north Belfast. It said that when the IRA in the area is destroyed, "we can look forward to … a period in which you will not lose your friends in a repetition of the accident in the McGurk’s bar."<ref name="omb55">Police Ombudsman's report, p.55</ref> | |||
===Arrest and conviction of Robert Campbell=== | |||
In March 1976, the RUC received intelligence that linked UVF member Robert Campbell and four others to the McGurk's bombing. Campbell was arrested on 27 July 1977 and held at Castlereagh RUC base. He was interviewed seven times on 27 and 28 July.<ref>Police Ombudsman's report, p.43</ref> He admitted his part in the bombing but refused to name the others.<ref name="omb44"/> Campbell's story matches that given by the young boy witness.<ref name="omb44"/> | |||
On 29 July 1977, Campbell was charged with 15 murders and 17 attempted murders. On 6 September 1978, he pleaded guilty to all charges. He received life imprisonment with "a recommendation to serve no less than 20 years", in part for a separate conviction for the murder of a Protestant delivery driver in 1976. He is the only person to have been charged for the bombing.<ref name="BBCOTD"/><ref>Police Ombudsman's report, p.47</ref> He eventually served fifteen years in prison and was released on 9 September 1993. | |||
===Collusion claims and Police Ombudsman's investigation=== | |||
The victims' relatives campaigned for an independent investigation of the bombing as they believed that the RUC's investigation was flawed from the outset. Moreover, they wished to disprove the claim that the victims were IRA members killed by their own bomb (the "own goal" theory).<ref name="omb10">Police Ombudsman's Report, p.10</ref> Even after Campbell's conviction, the "own goal" theory remained officially unchallenged.<ref name="omb10"/> Relatives argued that this theory was promoted as part of a "government policy to avoid publicly acknowledging the loyalist campaign of violence".<ref name="omb10"/> Another argument is that it was promoted to undermine the IRA's support and stir tension between the two IRA factions.<ref name="omb10"/> | |||
Relatives also asked how the bombers were able to plant the bomb and flee despite the usually heavy security presence. Some alleged that the security forces helped the bombers by removing checkpoints.<ref name="Police Ombudsman's Report, p.9"/> The 2009 book ''Killing For Britain'', written by former UVF member 'John Black', claimed that the British undercover unit known as the ] or Military Reconnaissance Force (MRF) organised the bombing and helped the bombers get in and out of the area.<ref>Police Ombudsman's report, p.16</ref> The bombers' original target, The Gem, was associated with the Official IRA. It is claimed that the MRF ordered the team to bomb The Gem, intending to blame it on the Provisional IRA. The plan was allegedly to start a feud between the two IRA factions, which would both divert them from their campaign against British forces and drain their support. However, as The Gem had security outside, they bombed the nearest 'Catholic pub'.<ref name="collusion">. The McGurk's Bar Massacre.</ref> | |||
On 21 February 2011, the ] published a report about the bombing and the RUC's investigation of it. The report said that there is no evidence that the RUC helped the UVF bombers. However, it found that the RUC investigation was biased in favour of the view that the IRA was responsible. It failed to give enough thought to the possible involvement of loyalists, and this bias hindered the investigation. The report also found that RUC gave "selective" and "misleading" briefings to the government and media, which furthered the idea that it was an IRA bomb. The Ombudsman has not found an explanation why successive Chief Constables have not addressed this mistake. Ombudsman ] said: "Inconsistent police briefings, some of which inferred that victims of the bombing were culpable in the atrocity, caused the bereaved families great distress, which has continued for many years".<ref>Police Ombudsman's Report, p.77</ref> | |||
On 6 December 2012, ] MP ]—whose uncle was killed in the bombing—claimed in Westminster that then-Prime Minister ] "may have been involved" in wrongfully blaming the IRA and spreading the story.<ref name="BBC">{{cite news |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-20629776 |title=Heath 'may have been involved in blaming IRA for McGurks bomb' |date=6 December 2012 |website=BBC News |access-date=14 September 2020}}</ref> Connarty also urged ], prime minister at the time, to apologise to victims and launch a full investigation.<ref name="BBC"/> | |||
==Remembrance== | |||
] | |||
A memorial was erected at the site of the bombing for the 30th anniversary in 2001.<ref name="BBCOTD"/> The victims' relatives carried fifteen wreaths to the new memorial, and used the occasion to demand an investigation into alleged British involvement in the attack.<ref>{{Cite web |title=McGurk's bomb relatives call for inquiry |work=An Phoblacht |url=http://republican-news.org/archive/2001/December06/06mcgu.html |access-date=6 May 2008}}</ref> | |||
Patrick McGurk died on 15 December 2007. Surviving family members noted that he had forgiven the bombers.<ref name="BT"/> | |||
==Glasgow allegation== | |||
In 2012 it was alleged in a book that William "Big Bill" Campbell (no relation to Robert Campbell), leader of a UVF cell in Scotland who committed the ] in 1979, was behind the McGurk's bombing as he smuggled the explosives used in the bomb from Scotland to Northern Ireland. It was also alleged that the RUC received information about him from Glasgow police, but that they deliberately ignored them to avoid having to arrest Protestants.<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.scotsman.com/news/uk-news/revealed-scottish-terrorists-role-belfast-bar-bomb-killed-15-2510011 |title=Revealed: Scottish terrorist's role in Belfast bar bomb that killed 15 |website=www.scotsman.com|date=8 September 2012 }}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist|30em}} | |||
==External links== | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151020150919/http://www.nuzhound.com/articles/Irelandclick/arts2005/oct14_McGURKS_BOMBING.php |date=20 October 2015 }} | |||
* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160422085336/http://cain.ulst.ac.uk/sutton/chron/1971.html |date=22 April 2016 }} | |||
* | |||
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{{The Troubles|state=collapsed}} | |||
{{Ulster Volunteer Force}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 21:42, 21 December 2024
1971 pub bombing in Belfast, Northern Ireland
McGurk's Bar bombing | |
---|---|
Part of the Troubles | |
A British soldier surveys the aftermath of the bombing | |
Location | Corner of North Queen Street and Great George's Street, Belfast, Northern Ireland |
Coordinates | 54°36′26.7″N 05°55′49.7″W / 54.607417°N 5.930472°W / 54.607417; -5.930472 |
Date | 4 December 1971 20:45 (GMT) |
Target | Irish Catholics |
Attack type | Time bomb |
Deaths | 15 |
Injured | 17 |
Perpetrator | Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) |
On 4 December 1971, the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), an Ulster loyalist paramilitary group, detonated a bomb at McGurk's Bar in Belfast, Northern Ireland, frequented by Irish Catholics–nationalists. The explosion caused the building to collapse, killing fifteen Catholic civilians—including two children—and wounding seventeen more. It was the deadliest attack in Belfast during the Troubles.
Despite evidence to the contrary, the British security forces asserted that a bomb had exploded prematurely while being handled by Irish Republican Army (IRA) members inside the pub, implying that the victims themselves were partly to blame. A report later found that the Royal Ulster Constabulary, the police force in Northern Ireland at the time, were biased in favour of this view and that this hindered their investigation. The victims' relatives allege that the security forces deliberately spread disinformation to discredit the IRA. In 1977, UVF member Robert Campbell was sentenced to life imprisonment for his part in the bombing and served fifteen years.
The bombing sparked a series of tit-for-tat bombings and shootings by loyalists and republicans, which contributed to making 1972 the bloodiest year of the conflict.
Background
Further information: Timeline of the Northern Ireland Troubles and peace processTramore Bar, commonly called McGurk's Bar, was a two-storey public house on the corner of North Queen Street and Great George's Street, in the New Lodge area to the north of Belfast city centre. This was a mainly Irish nationalist and Catholic neighbourhood, and the pub's regular customers were from the community. The pub was owned by Patrick and Philomena McGurk, who lived on the upper floor with their four children.
The Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) was formed in Belfast in 1966, declaring "war" on the Irish Republican Army (IRA). Until 1971, however, its actions were few and it "scarcely existed in an organisational sense". The British Army was deployed in Northern Ireland following the August 1969 riots, which are usually seen as the start of the Troubles. In December 1969 the IRA split into two factions: the 'Official' IRA and Provisional IRA. Both launched armed campaigns against the British Army, the Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) and the government of Northern Ireland.
During 1971, the violence gradually worsened. There were daily bombings and shootings by republicans, loyalists and the security forces. During the first two weeks of December, there were about 70 bombings and about 30 people were killed. On 2 December, three republican prisoners escaped from Crumlin Road prison, not far from McGurk's. Security was tightened and there was a heavy RUC and British Army presence in the area over the next two days. Eyewitnesses asserted that the checkpoints around McGurk's were removed just an hour before the attack.
Bombing
On the evening of Saturday 4 December 1971, a four-man UVF team met in the Shankill area of Belfast and were ordered to bomb a pub on North Queen Street. According to the only convicted bomber—Robert Campbell—they were told not to return until the job was done. Campbell said that their target had not been McGurk's, but another pub nearby. It is believed this was a pub called The Gem, which was allegedly linked to the Official IRA. The 50 pounds (23 kg) bomb was disguised as a brown parcel, which they placed in a car and drove to their target. Campbell says they stopped near The Gem at about 7:30 pm, but could not gain access to it because there were security guards outside. After waiting for almost an hour, they drove a short distance to McGurk's. At about 8:45 pm, one of them placed the bomb in the porch entrance on Great George's Street and rushed back to the car. It exploded just moments after they drove off. Campbell implied that McGurk's had been chosen only because it was "the nearest Catholic pub".
The blast caused the building to collapse. Bystanders immediately rushed to free the dead and wounded from the rubble. Firefighters, paramedics, police and soldiers were quickly on the scene. Fifteen Catholic civilians had been killed—including two children—and a further seventeen wounded. The rescue effort lasted many hours.
Within two hours of the blast, a sectarian clash had erupted nearby at the New Lodge–Tiger's Bay interface. The British Army and RUC moved in and a gun battle developed. A British Army officer, Major Jeremy Snow, was shot by the IRA on New Lodge Road and died of his wounds on 8 December. Two RUC officers and five civilians were also wounded by gunfire. Eventually, five companies of troops were sent into the district and they searched almost 50 houses.
Meanwhile, the UVF team had driven to a nearby pickup point where they dumped their car. They walked to the area of St Anne's Cathedral and were picked up by another. They were driven back to the Shankill and met the man who had ordered the attack in an Orange Hall, telling him that "the job has been done".
Among those killed were Philomena and Maria McGurk, wife and 14-year-old daughter of the pub owner Patrick McGurk. Patrick and his three sons were seriously injured. In a television statement shortly afterwards, McGurk asked that there be no retaliation: "It doesn't matter who planted the bomb. What's done can't be undone. I've been trying to keep bitterness out of it."
Investigation
Responsibility
After the bombing, the media reported various theories about who was responsible. The main theories were:
- that it had been planted by loyalists;
- that it had exploded prematurely while being prepared by IRA members inside the pub;
- that it had exploded prematurely while "in transit", an IRA member having left it in the pub to be collected by another IRA member; and
- that it had been planted as part of a feud between the Provisional IRA and Official IRA.
The security forces promoted the idea that it was an IRA bomb which exploded prematurely (an "own goal"). Survivors and relatives denied this. They said the pub was not associated with the IRA and there had been no suspicious people or activity in the pub that night. An Intelligence Corps document from December 1971 also said that the pub was not known to have IRA associations. On 6 December, both wings of the IRA condemned the attack, denied responsibility and blamed the UVF and security forces.
Claims of responsibility
That same day, several newspapers received telephone calls from someone claiming to be a spokesman for the "Empire Loyalists". Their statement to the Belfast Telegraph was:
We accept responsibility for the destruction of McGurk's pub. We placed 30lb of new explosives outside the pub because we had proved beyond doubt that meetings of IRA Provisionals and Officials were held there.
The "Empire Loyalists" had made only one other claim of responsibility; for bombing a community centre on 12 November. The RUC, however, had no intelligence about such a group; suggesting that it may have been a covername. On Tuesday 7 December, a youth claimed to have seen a man acting oddly at a phone kiosk the night before. He said the man was wearing a jacket with a UVF badge on it. The youth claimed to have checked the kiosk after the man left and found a torn bit of paper. When put together, it included the lines:
We the Empire Loyalists wish to state that we did not destroy McGurk's public house as an act of retaliation ... Furthermore we do not require the forensic experts of the Army to cover up for us ... We shall not issue any further statements until we exterminate another rebel stronghold.
In the days following the bombing, the RUC received a letter signed by "Chief of Staff, UVF" claiming that the UVF bombed the pub because an IRA meeting was due to take place there. It said that two UVF members entered the pub, had a drink and asked the barman to mind a package while they "ran an errand". Witnesses told the RUC, however, that there had been no strangers in the pub and that nobody had left a package. Three other unsigned letters were sent to the RUC, claiming it was an IRA bomb "in transit" and that two IRA members were killed.
Location of the bomb
For the RUC, the location of the bomb (whether it exploded inside or outside) became the key to finding who was responsible. However, investigators (both RUC and British Army) were unsure and gave conflicting opinions.
RUC duty officers' reports were made daily. Their purpose was to brief the Chief Constable and others at HQ about events that had happened that day. The reports were also made available to the British Army's General Officer Commanding for Northern Ireland. The 4–5 December 1971 report said of the bombing: "Just before the explosion a man entered the licensed premises and left down a suitcase, presumably to be picked up by a known member of the IRA. The bomb was intended for use on other premises. Before the 'pick-up' was made the bomb exploded". The origin of this information could not be established.
On 6 December, however, the RUC took a witness statement from an 8-year-old boy. He said that a car had stopped outside the pub with four men inside and "a wee Union Jack stuck in the back window". He said one left a package in the Great George's Street doorway and ran back to the car, which sped off just moments before the package exploded. A man and a woman backed up his story, although they did not witness as much as the boy.
Despite this, the security forces and the government stood behind the "own goal" theory. A British Intelligence Corps document covering the period 8–15 December said: "It has been confirmed that it was a bomb which was destined for another target, but exploded prematurely." A Ministry of Defence (MOD) document dated 14 December said that this "should be publicised". On 23 December, the British Army sent a letter (signed by a lieutenant colonel) to people living in north Belfast. It said that when the IRA in the area is destroyed, "we can look forward to … a period in which you will not lose your friends in a repetition of the accident in the McGurk’s bar."
Arrest and conviction of Robert Campbell
In March 1976, the RUC received intelligence that linked UVF member Robert Campbell and four others to the McGurk's bombing. Campbell was arrested on 27 July 1977 and held at Castlereagh RUC base. He was interviewed seven times on 27 and 28 July. He admitted his part in the bombing but refused to name the others. Campbell's story matches that given by the young boy witness.
On 29 July 1977, Campbell was charged with 15 murders and 17 attempted murders. On 6 September 1978, he pleaded guilty to all charges. He received life imprisonment with "a recommendation to serve no less than 20 years", in part for a separate conviction for the murder of a Protestant delivery driver in 1976. He is the only person to have been charged for the bombing. He eventually served fifteen years in prison and was released on 9 September 1993.
Collusion claims and Police Ombudsman's investigation
The victims' relatives campaigned for an independent investigation of the bombing as they believed that the RUC's investigation was flawed from the outset. Moreover, they wished to disprove the claim that the victims were IRA members killed by their own bomb (the "own goal" theory). Even after Campbell's conviction, the "own goal" theory remained officially unchallenged. Relatives argued that this theory was promoted as part of a "government policy to avoid publicly acknowledging the loyalist campaign of violence". Another argument is that it was promoted to undermine the IRA's support and stir tension between the two IRA factions.
Relatives also asked how the bombers were able to plant the bomb and flee despite the usually heavy security presence. Some alleged that the security forces helped the bombers by removing checkpoints. The 2009 book Killing For Britain, written by former UVF member 'John Black', claimed that the British undercover unit known as the Military Reaction Force or Military Reconnaissance Force (MRF) organised the bombing and helped the bombers get in and out of the area. The bombers' original target, The Gem, was associated with the Official IRA. It is claimed that the MRF ordered the team to bomb The Gem, intending to blame it on the Provisional IRA. The plan was allegedly to start a feud between the two IRA factions, which would both divert them from their campaign against British forces and drain their support. However, as The Gem had security outside, they bombed the nearest 'Catholic pub'.
On 21 February 2011, the Police Ombudsman for Northern Ireland published a report about the bombing and the RUC's investigation of it. The report said that there is no evidence that the RUC helped the UVF bombers. However, it found that the RUC investigation was biased in favour of the view that the IRA was responsible. It failed to give enough thought to the possible involvement of loyalists, and this bias hindered the investigation. The report also found that RUC gave "selective" and "misleading" briefings to the government and media, which furthered the idea that it was an IRA bomb. The Ombudsman has not found an explanation why successive Chief Constables have not addressed this mistake. Ombudsman Al Hutchinson said: "Inconsistent police briefings, some of which inferred that victims of the bombing were culpable in the atrocity, caused the bereaved families great distress, which has continued for many years".
On 6 December 2012, Scottish Labour MP Michael Connarty—whose uncle was killed in the bombing—claimed in Westminster that then-Prime Minister Edward Heath "may have been involved" in wrongfully blaming the IRA and spreading the story. Connarty also urged David Cameron, prime minister at the time, to apologise to victims and launch a full investigation.
Remembrance
A memorial was erected at the site of the bombing for the 30th anniversary in 2001. The victims' relatives carried fifteen wreaths to the new memorial, and used the occasion to demand an investigation into alleged British involvement in the attack.
Patrick McGurk died on 15 December 2007. Surviving family members noted that he had forgiven the bombers.
Glasgow allegation
In 2012 it was alleged in a book that William "Big Bill" Campbell (no relation to Robert Campbell), leader of a UVF cell in Scotland who committed the Glasgow pub bombings in 1979, was behind the McGurk's bombing as he smuggled the explosives used in the bomb from Scotland to Northern Ireland. It was also alleged that the RUC received information about him from Glasgow police, but that they deliberately ignored them to avoid having to arrest Protestants.
See also
References
- "Daughter recalls bar bomb horror". BBC News (3 December 2001). 3 December 2001. Retrieved 6 May 2008.
- Taylor, Peter (1999). Loyalists. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 88. ISBN 0-7475-4519-7.
- Belfast Telegraph: McGurk's bar massacre victim confronts killer, 01 March 2011
- "Man arrested over 1971 McGurk's pub bombing". The Irish News. May 2014.
- Hutchinson, Al (February 2011). Public Statement by the Police Ombudsman under Section 62 of the Police (Northern Ireland) Act 1998 relating to the complaint by the relatives of the victims of the Bombing of McGurks's Bar, Belfast on 4 December 1971 (PDF) (Report). p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 1 April 2014.
- ^ "1971: Bomb demolishes crowded Belfast pub". BBC On This Day. 4 December 1971. Retrieved 6 May 2008.
- Police Ombudsman's Report, p.2
- Jonathan Bardon (2005). A History Of Ulster. p. 635. ISBN 0-85640-764-X.
From this day we declare war against the IRA and its splinter groups. Known IRA men will be executed mercilessly and without hesitation
- Encyclopedia of British and Irish political organizations. Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000. p.259
- Police Ombudsman's Report, p.14
- ^ Police Ombudsman's Report, p.9
- Police Ombudsman's Report, p.16
- ^ Police Ombudsman's report, pp.44–45
- ^ Police Ombudsman's report, p.76
- ^ McAleese, Deborah. "Recriminations still fly over McGurk's Bar massacre". Belfast Telegraph, 9 July 2010. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
- ^ "McGurk’s Bar Bombing" Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Hansard, 14 July 2008. Retrieved 4 November 2009
- Sutton Index of Deaths: 4 December 1971. CAIN.
- ^ McKittrick, David. Lost Lives: The stories of the men, women and children who died as a result of the Northern Ireland Troubles. Mainstream, 1999. p.127.
- Sutton Index of Deaths: 1971 Archived 22 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine. CAIN.
- ^ "McGurk bar owner dies". Belfast Telegraph (17 December 2007). Retrieved 29 September 2015.
- ^ Police Ombudsman's report, p.42
- ^ Police Ombudsman's report, pp.27–28
- ^ Police Ombudsman's report, p.37
- ^ Police Ombudsman's report, pp.20–21
- Police Ombudsman's report, pp.24–25
- Police Ombudsman's report, p.49
- Police Ombudsman's report, p.55
- Police Ombudsman's report, p.43
- Police Ombudsman's report, p.47
- ^ Police Ombudsman's Report, p.10
- Police Ombudsman's report, p.16
- "Collusion and Cover-Up". The McGurk's Bar Massacre.
- Police Ombudsman's Report, p.77
- ^ "Heath 'may have been involved in blaming IRA for McGurks bomb'". BBC News. 6 December 2012. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
- "McGurk's bomb relatives call for inquiry". An Phoblacht. Retrieved 6 May 2008.
- "Revealed: Scottish terrorist's role in Belfast bar bomb that killed 15". www.scotsman.com. 8 September 2012.
External links
- News Hound – McGurk's bombing Archived 20 October 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- CAIN – List of 1971 deaths in the Troubles Archived 22 April 2016 at the Wayback Machine
- House of Commons debate on the bombing
- The Newlodge
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