Finucane inquiry: Stevens and government disagree
by Pádraig MacDabhaid
Evidence has come to the fore that the British government has only reopened
the investigation into the murder of Belfast solicitor Pat Finucane in
order to stall demands for an independent, public inquiry.
Belfast human rights group the Committee on the Administration of Justice
has highlighted different accounts of the previous involvement of John
Stevens in investigating the murder of Pat Finucane.
CAJ points out that in a letter to John Finucane, Pat's son, on 29 January
1998, Tony Blair wrote that John Stevens fully investigated, ``the
circumstances surrounding your father's murder following allegations of
Brian Nelson's involvement''.
A claim which Stevens himself supported in a letter to Jane Winter of the
British-Irish Rights Watch.
``With regard to the murder of Patrick Finucane, I can confirm that this
matter was fully investigated during the initial and subsequent inquiry and
the results included in both reports,'' wrote Stevens.
However, in a letter to Madden and Finucane solicitors, Stevens now says:
``At no time was I given the authority by either the Chief Constable of the
RUC or the director of Public Prosecutions to investigate the murder of
Patrick Finucane''.
The CAJ also highlights the reply given by the British Armed Forces
minister, Doug Henderson, in the English House of Commons to Labour MP
Kevin McNamara when he said: ``The murder of Patrick Finucane was
investigated both by the RUC and subsequently by the investigation team led
by John Stevens''.
Ironically, Scotland Yard supports the view that the previous Stevens
inquiries were not full-blown investigations into the Finucane killing.
``The picture is quite simple really. You need to go back and look at the
terms of reference for these previous investigations. What you will see is
his role was to look at allegations of collusion, especially in relation to
Brian Nelson, and while that was linked to the murder of Pat Finucane he
did not at that time investigate the murder and that is what he is doing
now with a full team,'' reads a Scotland Yard statement.
A spokesperson for the CAJ said: ``Before the investigation can command
public confidence, it is incumbent upon Stevens to clarify once and for all
if he did indeed investigate the murder of Patrick Finucane in the past.''
It would appear that the British are trying to delay the possibility of an
independent public inquiry into the murder of Pat Finucane by continuing to
claim that they are investigating a murder which they already have
investigated and already know who carried it out.
Meanwhile, the UDA has threatened to ``withdraw its support'' for the Good
Friday Agreement if any of their members are arrested by the new Stevens
inquiry into Pat Finucane's murder. John White of the UDP has said that the
UDA is angry at the reopening of the 1989 murder case.