Members' Statements – in the Northern Ireland Assembly am 10:45 am ar 18 Mehefin 2024.
Thirty years ago today, gunmen walked into a small rural pub in County Down and opened fire on a room full of innocent civilians who were watching a football match. Ireland were playing Italy in the World Cup and were, unusually, winning. I was watching the match at home as a child when my father was called away: I did not know why.
In living rooms, pubs and clubs across Ireland, it was a moment of joy and togetherness. In the Heights Bar, also known as O'Toole's, innocent people were watching the game when two UVF gunmen entered the pub and sprayed it with bullets from an assault rifle. They killed six innocent men: Adrian Rogan, Malcolm Jenkinson, Dan McCreanor, Patsy O'Hare, Eamon Byrne and Barney Green. At 87, Barney Green was the oldest known victim of the Troubles. He was shot in the back while watching a football match. The killers shouted "Fenian bastards", then made their escape, leaving a scene of unimaginable horror and suffering — suffering that has continued over the past 30 years for the victims' families and the survivors of that obscene act.
Though all the dead men were Catholic, the community was and is a shared one. Almost exactly five years after the atrocity, I started working behind that bar. There were still security cameras and a buzzer to enter, but the pub was frequented by people from all traditions, appalled at the evil atrocity that had been visited on Loughinisland.
That obscenity was compounded by the failure of the criminal justice system to provide any justice or accountability. That is a failure that persists to this day. It is a failure that we now know was about more than simple incompetence. Repeated reports have pointed to collusion. The only meaningful justice and accountability offered to the Loughinisland families came, first, in the 2016 ombudsman's report and then in the pioneering investigative journalism of Barry McCaffrey and Trevor Birney. The offence was compounded when those brave investigative journalists were arrested — arrested — for the work that they did for the Loughinisland families.
Loughinisland is an ancient place. If you go to Loughinisland, you will find ancient churches on a small island in the lough. It is a place of calm and dignity. That calm and dignity is reflected in the dignity and resilience of the Loughinisland families and that community over the past 30 years. That dignity and calm sits in stark contrast to the failures of the criminal justice system; to those who still celebrate and trivialise the evil acts that took place; and the organisations, including those who were on the Newtownards Road on Saturday night, that trivialise acts such as shooting an 87-year-old man in the back. The courage, dignity and resilience of the Loughinisland families stands true, and my thoughts are with them today.
That concludes Members' statements.