Pat Finucane: UK government 'running down clock on inquiry'
- Published
The government may be trying to "run down the clock" until a public inquiry into the murder of Pat Finucane becomes pointless, the High Court has heard.
Counsel for his widow, Geraldine Finucane, claimed the delay in acting on a finding that his death has never been properly investigated is unlawful.
The judge hearing her legal challenge also voiced increasing "unease" at the government response.
Mr Finucane, 39, was shot dead by loyalists at his Belfast home in 1989.
His family has campaigned ever since for a public inquiry to establish the full scale of security force collusion in his murder.
In February 2019, the Supreme Court said none of the inquiries into Mr Finucane's death, including the review carried out by Sir Desmond de Silva, had the capability "of establishing all the salient facts" about his killing or the liability of those who were responsible for his death.
The Supreme Court ruled there had not been a human rights-compliant inquiry into his death.
But the justices ruled out a public inquiry of the type demanded by the family and said it was for the state to decide "what form of investigation, if indeed any is now feasible, is required".
In his 2012 review, Sir Desmond said the state had facilitated Mr Finucane's killing and made relentless efforts to stop the killers being caught.
However, his report concluded there had been "no overarching state conspiracy".
Mrs Finucane is judicially reviewing the secretary of state for failing to take a decision on the investigation required since the Supreme Court ruling.
The delay of 20 months and counting is unexplained and unjustified, it was contended.
Fiona Doherty QC said: "Having been through this process one can see how the family might be sceptical that in fact what is happening here is the government is buying more time to make a potential public inquiry pointless, or not viable."
Agreeing with an interpretation suggested by Mr Justice McAlinden, she added: "Running down the clock, indeed."
'Out of the traps'
The barrister argued the Supreme Court findings, together with international calls for a public inquiry, should have galvanised the authorities into action.
"This government was faced with the murder of a citizen more than 30 years ago, in which the government has accepted there was collusion, and which the highest court in the land has accepted there hasn't been an Article 2 (of the European Convention on Human Rights) compliant investigation," she said.
"One would think they ought to be out of the traps very quickly."
Instead, she submitted, the ongoing delay had "heaped insult" on top of injury.
Counsel for Secretary of State Brandon Lewis stressed his continued commitment to complying with the Supreme Court findings "as quickly as possible", but could not provide a timeframe.
According to Mrs Finucane's case, however, the government cannot rely on new difficulties caused by Covid-19.
Mr Finucane was a high-profile solicitor who lived and worked in Belfast.
The 39-year-old Catholic was shot dead by loyalist paramilitaries in front of his young family at their home in February 1989.
In his role as a defence solicitor, he had represented clients who included suspected members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA).
The case has been adjourned until next week.
- Published27 February 2019