European court: Inquest was ‘sufficient investigation’ into Co Armagh shooting

ireland
European Court: Inquest Was ‘Sufficient Investigation’ Into Co Armagh Shooting
IRA man Martin McCaughey was shot dead near Loughgall by the SAS in 1990. Photo: PA Images
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By Rebecca Black, PA

The European Court of Human Rights has ruled that an inquest was an effective investigation into the shooting of an IRA man in Co Armagh by the British army.

Martin McCaughey, 23, was shot dead near Loughgall by the SAS on October 9th, 1990.

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The court’s ruling noted the soldiers had been carrying out a nighttime surveillance operation at a farm when Mr McCaughey and another person, Desmond Grew, appeared with AK47 rifles wearing gloves and balaclavas.

In a statement after his death, the Provisional IRA said publicly that Mr McCaughey had been an IRA volunteer on active service at the time.

Martin McCaughey and Dessie Grew inquest
Martin McCaughey’s sister Sally Gribben and Philip O’Neill, brother-in-law of Dessie Grew, at an inquest into their deaths at Laganside Court, Belfast (Paul Faith/PA)

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A decision was made in April 1993 not to prosecute the soldiers involved on the basis that there was not sufficient evidence to prove they had not been acting in self-defence.

An inquest into Mr McCaughey’s death in 2012 returned a verdict of “lawful killing”.

His sister Sally Gribben took a case to the European court that there had been a failure to conduct an effective investigation into her brother’s death.

In a ruling published on Thursday, the court found the inquest “had undoubtedly been thorough”.

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It found “certain weaknesses in the inquest”, including the failure to disclose to the next of kin material relating to other fatal shootings the soldiers had been involved in.

However, it did not consider that those weaknesses, either individually or cumulatively, had undermined the inquest’s meeting of the investigation requirements of Article 2, namely to secure the effective implementation of the domestic laws which protect the right to life and, in those cases involving state agents or bodies, to ensure their accountability for deaths occurring under their responsibility.

The court concluded the application was “inadmissible as manifestly ill-founded”.

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