Tag Archives: history

Roy Garland on corruption in high places….

By Roy Garland

The various inquiries into the sexual abuse of boys at the Kincora Working Boys Hostel by William McGrath and a number of others, ignored the long history abuse at McGrath’sevangelical mission.  It is thought that more than a hundred boys and some women were abused there over the years.   The mission was named the Christian Fellowship Centre and Irish Emancipation Crusade (CFCIEC) and based at Faith House, which was located at various centres in Belfast from 1941 until the 1980s.  Abuse took place at various centres led by McGrath, who was officially Secretary but who controlled the mission.  The official aim was to take an evangelical gospel to the whole Irish people but only a tiny number of visits took place to the Republic.  According to a reliable source abuse also took place during these visits.

The whole issue of abuse was raised in the 1950s and efforts were made to stop this, but it continued.  A political sideeventually developed and became central by the early 1960s.   Warnings were given at Church and Mission Hall across Northern Ireland about the alleged designs of the Catholic Church to control Ireland and leave Protestants in chains. By late 1969 a ginger group named Tara became paramilitary group and was expected to grow to become an army capable of resisting enemies of Ulster.  By late 1973, the RUC’s DC Jim Cullen was asked to investigate the abuse. I met him thatNovember and he already knew some of this, but neededevidence, so I asked a young man, who had earlier agreed to bear witness before Orange Order leaders if they engaged in a serious inquiry. I now asked if he would speak with the RUC. To my surprise he said yes, and DC Jim Cullen met him at Donegall Pass and spoke freely and in detail about years of abuse.  Cullen took no notes, but this did not concern me, as Iassumed the “interview” was being recorded. It was not aformal interview he simply told his story. 

I was told by another RUC source that Donegall Pass RUC, was a hive of dubious activity, and that some RUC were Taramembers who had helped train others.  One man felt he was unable to continue at Donegall Pass because of his refusal toengage in illegal activity.   He said senior RUC Officers knewof this and condoned it.  The young man insisted I staythroughout the interview, so I heard his straight-forward account, which had begun when he was about 15 years old.  The RUC’s DC Jim Cullen was warned by other RUC there not to “dig too deeply” on McGrath.   While Chris Moore’s launched his book on Kincora in 1996, DC Jim Cullen told me an alarming story about fellow RUC taking him prisoner at the Station.   They had forgotten to search him, so he drew his gun, and they had to release him.  This took place at Donegall Pass where some RUC feared their questionable activitiescoming to light.  I was later shocked to be told that DC Cullenlater denied the interview had taken place, although I was present throughout and heard it all.  However, Cullen toldChris Moore around this time: 

I regarded it as an important issue because of the children involved.  The bottom line was that if it was true, the safety of children was paramount and the longer it went on the likelihood of tragedy was even greater.

But tragedy had already struck, and lives had been ruined, others damaged or the became suicidal since the mission was formed in 1941.  The fact that the abuse of young Christians took place at a Christian mission, made the grooming potentially more damaging and some found it impossible to believe.  Although DC Jim Cullen had denied that the interview had taken place, he was recorded by Chris Moore as follows:

Cullen was a little vague.  He said he thought this meeting had taken place at Garland’s house.  Garland had given Cullen this man’s name and had suggested he might be able to help with the investigation.  Cullen had asked to meet this person and so the meeting was arranged.  But he couldn’t tell me any more than Garland had already. Cullen said, “Otherwise something would have been done.”

DC Cullen knew the young witness would not likely to reveal something new but would reinforce the message that too much pain had already been inflicted on young people at a Christian mission.  Perhaps he needed evidence of recent abuse, but he wrongly claimed:

There was a difficulty in getting these people to stand up and face the McGrath situation. Understandably, they had new lives now.  Garland and this other fellow didn’t feel they could go through with it.

This was untrue because Cullen never asked either of us “to stand up and face McGrath” or to “go through with it” butCullen admitted to Chris Moore that the interview did takeplace, not at my home but at Donegall Pass RUC Station, where I assumed it was being recorded.   I did not give Cullen the young man’s name and Cullen never tried to persuade either of us to come forward as witnesses but instead he triedto dissuade us by claiming our evidence was “out-of-date” and he discouraged further action. This I suspect was because of threats and opposition coming from fellow RUC at the Station.  The young witness spoke openly and rejected McGrath’s claim to be counselling young people, as he had groomed and abused many since 1941 when his mission was set up or even before this.   

About a year or two later I asked the young witness if he would speak again with the RUC, but he refused, which I understood and admired his courage. He remained a good friend and appreciated what I had tried to do for him.   On the 4th March 1982 DC Cullen told me not to contact him at Donegall Pass by phone. He believed he was being monitored and was facing threats from within the RUC.   The reality of possibly hundreds being abused was never properly investigated.

British Troops In Divis Had Access To 28 Stornophones In Year Before IRA Disappeared Jean McConville….

From James Kinchin-White and Ed Moloney

If Jean McConville was, as the IRA has claimed, working as a spy for the British Army when in December 1972 she was abducted from her Divis Flats home and ‘disappeared’ into an unmarked grave on the shores of Carlingford Lough, communicating with her handlers was likely the least of her problems.

British Army documents recently accessed at the national archives at Kew in southern England show that the regiment based in the Divis Flats complex in west Belfast during the year before the IRA kidnapped and killed her, the 1st Battalion, Royal Green Jackets, had access to a supply of no less than 28 Stornophones which were described officially as ‘local issue’, suggesting a Northern Ireland-based source had provided the sets, possibly the RUC.

(above) Stornophone sets of the sort used in the 1970’s, (below) a typical pre-Stornophone military radio, its size next to useless when dealing with agents and informers…

Typical of the Stornophone denials is this extract from the account of the Jean McConville killing and disappearance taken from Patrick Keefe’s book ‘Say Nothing’: “There was also mystery relating to the detail of the radio itself. Some former police officers, like Trevor Campbell, maintained that neither the army nor the police were using hand-held radios to communicate with informants (page 333)”.

When he was researching his book, Keefe could have cited the Bloody Sunday inquiry headed by Lord Saville who noted in his report the use of Stornophones by soldiers on duty in Derry during the demonstration that day. But he didn’t. Bloody Sunday happened in January 1972, the best part of a year between that event and Jean McConville’s lonely death on the shores of Carlingford Lough the following December. Equally, the internet is full of photos of soldiers using or carrying Stornophones while on duty in 1971 and 1972 in the months preceding – not just following – Jean McConville’s abduction.

The evidence that the Stornophone was in use by British and locally-recruited members of the security forces some time before the IRA abducted and ‘disappeared’ Jean McConville, is overwhelming. And it makes sense. The Stornophone was small and easy to use, being similar in its characteristics to the modern smart phone. It made sense for British military units to use the smaller, handier device, especially when communicating with people in great need of secrecy.

The stack of Stornophones provided to the 1st Battalion, the Royal Green Jackets numbered 28, sufficient to last the regiment’s tour of West Belfast which lasted from the beginning of May 1971 till the end of September. Other heavier and bulkier sets, the C42, A41 and A40 radios were also available but their size and weight ruled them out from being used in sensitive situations such as those the Royal Green Jackets and their informants would routinely experience.

What we don’t yet know is whether the supply of Stornophones was a one off event or whether it was routine from the summer of 1971 onwards to make the Stornophone available to all military units serving in N. Ireland. We can be sure however that at least in the summer of 1971, the supply of Stornphones to the major military unit in the lower Falls area of West Belfast was more than adequate. The question that so far eludes a definitive answer is whether Jean McConville was provided with one of the Stornophones issued to the Royal Green Jackets. What we do know now is that she could have been…….: