Dublin-Monaghan Survivors Looking For Files To Be Released
Thursday, 14 April 2011 20:58

 

 

Justice for the Forgotten who represent the survivors of the 1974 Dublin-Monaghan bombings has urged the British government to release its files on the bombings as a “significant gesture of reconciliation” between Britain and Ireland.

 
 The group has  called for the files relating to the bombings to be released by the British government  to mark the visit of Queen Elizabeth to the Republic of Ireland next month .  The  visit which will coincide with the 37th anniversary of the bombings.
 
34 people, including an unborn child, were killed when four bombs – three in Dublin and one in Monaghan town – were detonated within two hours of each other. The resulting loss of life on May 17, 1974 was the highest of any event during The Troubles .
 
The Ulster Volunteer Force claimed responsibility for the attacks in 1993 however  nobody has ever been prosecuted over the blasts .
 
The Irish government commissioned an investigation into the bombings, led by the late Supreme Court justice Henry Barron, whose report criticised the British government’s “surprising” refusal to allow access to its files.
 
 
The group has met with TDs from Sinn Féin and the independent ranks, and will shortly meet with Fianna Fáil, but is hoping to meet Taoiseach Enda Kenny so that the matter can be added to the agenda of his next meeting with Cameron, due in the coming weeks.
 
Barron’s report was presented to the Joint Oireachtas Committee on Justice, and later prompted the Dáil to unanimously pass a motion calling on the British government to make its files on the bombings available to an “independent, international judicial figure”.
 
So far, however, no release has been agreed to.