Belfast City Council backs independent investigation into handling of IRA veteran's funeral

Roselawn
Author: Nigel GouldPublished 10th Jul 2020
Last updated 10th Jul 2020

Belfast councillors have voted in favour of carrying out an independent probe into the handling of Bobby Storey's funeral at Roselawn cemetery.

Belfast City Council heard how confidence in the council cannot be restored until a full and rigorous investigation is held.

Earlier this week, council officers were forced to apologise to families denied the same cremation service as the IRA veteran on the day of his funeral.

A funeral procession took place for Mr Storey in west Belfast last Tuesday, before his remains were transferred to Roselawn Cemetery.

The service for the senior republican was the only one of nine that day where 30 people were allowed to attend an outdoor committal service on site.

The other eight cremations were not allowed services at the site.

Ulster Unionist Sonia Copeland told the council that she recognises the hurt of those who were not afforded the same funeral.

She added: "Nothing I have heard has changed my view that public confidence could not be restored by anything other than a full and independent investigation.

"I will play no part in any witch-hunt, I will not join bombastic calls for rolling of heads.

"I expect that facts, warts and all.''

Sinn Fein councillor Geraldine McAleer said Mr Storey would never have advocated for special treatment.

Ms McAleer added: "I have known him (Bobby) all my life and he has been a huge influence on me.

"I will never forget the support he gave to me and my family when my brother was murdered a number of years ago.

"He stood with us as we fought for change in the justice system. He gave that support to hundreds of people.

"He earned the respect of the community he lived in, whether they were republican or not.''

Councillor Jim Rodgers said people need to be held to account.

He added: "I don't understand how there was special arrangements made for one cremation. Then the next day things reverted back to the way they were.

"These things need looked at and people need to be held to account.''

Mal O'Hara, Green Party councillor, said the council must get to the bottom of the incident to restore faith in the council.

He said: "I am conscience these series of events put at risk the progress we have made in reducing community tensions.

"I am worried this weekend that working class communities will bare the brunt of this tension. There are wider questions about using Milltown Cemetery for mass gatherings, PSNI presence or not and what breaches may or may not have occurred.

"There are challenges, others have alluded to it, in how much information elected representatives were provided with after the event. The sporadic information and drip-feed to elected members has allowed this situation to toxify, escalate and destablise communities.

"The change in regulations only became operational for one family.''

The PUP's John Kyle said the events of the last week had been "damaging and disturbing''.

He told the council the actions of Deputy First Minister Michelle O'Neill at Mr Storey's funeral showed "breathtaking hypocrisy''.

"There was a disparity of treatment of grieving families that day,'' Mr Kyle added.

"There has been confusion about what happened at Roselawn Cemetery. Our communications internally and externally were poor.

"The reputation of the council of acting responsibly has been damaged.

"It is important we have an independent investigation. Every institution makes mistakes.

"We need to know what happened and when and why decisions were made.''

Councillors also condemned threats made against the council's director of city and neighbourhood services Nigel Grimshaw over the fallout from the republican's funeral.