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Officer injured in mass brawl between rival football fans

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Police are appealing for information after a fight involving around 40 Ballymena United and Glenavon fans, that left one police officer injured.

The incident was reported to have taken place in the Warden Street area of Ballymena, shortly after 10am on Friday (May 12).

And if you saw anything, police would like to hear from you.

One police officer at the scene suffered a gash to his hand.

A statement from the PSNI said they are now reviewing video footage taken around the time of the fight to try and identify those involved.

It said: "Police in Ballymena are appealing for anyone who witnessed an incident in the area of Warden Street shortly after 10pm on Friday 12 May to come forward.

"Fighting broke out following a match between Ballymena United and Glenavon with up to 40 people, including rival football fans, being involved.

"Police are currently reviewing video footage taken in the area at the time and are making enquiries to identify those responsible.

"Anyone who witnessed this incident is asked to contact police in Ballymena, on the non-emergency number 101 quoting reference number CC 1446 12/05/17.

"Information can also be passed anonymously to the independent charity Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111."


Nairac ‘remains did not go into mincer’

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The man searching for the remains of Robert Nairac is not in the slightest deterred by rumours that his body was put through a meat grinder.

Independent Commission for the Location of Victims Remains (ICLVR) Chief Investigator Geoff Knupfer told the News Letter: “We have been absolutely assured by senior republicans that this didn’t happen. The reason it was put up was that the people who were involved at the time were trying to get the security forces off their backs.”

Lies were often told about ‘the disappeared’ to convince relatives they had run away, the commission has found.

Nairac was always in the Grenadier Guards, he said, but had an “intelligence liaison role” between police and army when he was killed.

SAS members killed on duty have their names listed on the regiment’s Clock Tower at Hereford, he said, but he has looked himself and Nairac’s name is not on it. The officer worked for the ‘Northern Ireland Training and Tactics Team’, a pseudonym for another intelligence gathering organisation, he added.

Nairac was not under the control of the SAS or the Intelligence Corps, but senior officers in Northern Ireland are not fully aware of this fact.

Myths accelerated when allegations were made that he had been an SAS soldier guilty of a string of murders. “These were then picked up by Ken Livingston and others and he made a speech in the house of commons.”

But Mr Knupfer has done a “cold case review” and says the allegations of wrongdoing “do not hold water”.

Senior republicans tell him: “Sorry, our authority doesn’t extend to Ravensdale.” They say his body was buried by a clique of republicans in Co Louth who are now dissidents.

• Anyone with information on the Disappeared can contact the ICLVR in complete confidence on 00800 555 85500, by writing to ICLVR, PO Box 10827, Dublin 2. or via the website www.iclvr.ie

Read more views on Capt Nairac in Monday’s paper

READ MORE: Captain Robert Nairac: ‘the perfect soldier’

READ MORE: Encouraging fresh leads in search for Nairac

Encouraging fresh leads in search for Nairac

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There has been a fresh burst of “encouraging” information in the search for the body of the Captain Robert Nairac, according to the head of the Independent Commission for the Location of Victims Remains (ICLVR).

To mark the 40th anniversary of his murder, RTE Prime Time ran a documentary on May 2 carrying strong evidence challenging claims he was a murderer. It also carried calls for the return of his body.

ICLVR Chief Investigator Geoff Knupfer told the News Letter that the programme has given his work a real boost.

“We have had positive responses,” he said, which he described to the News Letter as “encouraging”. He added: “We have had positive responses but we are not prepared to say how many.”

Captain Nairac’s former undercover army colleague, Rev William Burke, told RTE’s Prime Time that the soldier’s family still want him to have a proper Catholic burial.

His parents died some years ago but his two elderly sisters would dearly love to bury his remains.

Rev Burke pleaded: “Please may we have him back, may we have his remains for a Catholic funeral Mass. For his family and his friends.” Rev Burke, who was also an undercover soldier in west Belfast in the 1970s, said he left the army and became a priest partly because of Nairac’s murder.

Mr Knupfer told RTE that claims about Nairac’s involvement in numerous murders were “wild allegations” and had stopped people from helping find his body.

Leo Green, a brother of senior IRA member John Francis Green who was shot dead by the UVF in Co Monaghan in 1975, believes that Nairac was a handler for men who carried out the killing and was probably involved. But he too called for the body to be returned.

“The Nairac family entitlement to truth and Robert Nairac’s entitlement to a proper burial, his siblings’ entitlement to give him that proper burial, it’s up there with all the questions that IRA members’ families have,” he told RTE.

READ MORE: Captain Robert Nairac: ‘the perfect soldier’

READ MORE: Nairac’s remains did not go into mincer, says investigator

It has been reported that Nairac had a photograph of Green taken shortly after the murder, which led to some people believing he had been at the murder scene.

However the ICLVR found Garda gave the photograph to another British soldier, who then gave it to Nairac.

Rev Burke also challenged claims that Nairac had been involved in the 1974 Dublin-Monaghan bombings, saying he had actually been on a course in England at the time and had not joined their undercover unit until three days after the attack.

Nairac has been linked to the murder of three members of the Miami Showband in 1975, but RTE displayed a letter from his regiment showing he was on duty in London at the time and then went fishing with colleague in Scotland.

The officer had been linked to the murder of IRA member Peter Cleary in April 1976, however Rev Burke told RTE that Nairac was in Warminster at the time on a Junior Command course.

Prime Time also displayed a recent letter from Major General Tony Jeapes, head of SAS in Northern Ireland in 1977, which confirmed that although the regiment did kill Peter Cleary, Captain Nairac “was never in the SAS”.

The broadcaster showed archive footage of Nairac’s father, Maurice, also denying his son had been in the SAS. “No, No, from what I understand he liaised between the army and RUC,” he said.

Out of all the disappeared, Captain Nairac has been the most difficult case, Mr Knupfer says. The most common response is: ”He was a villain and got what he deserved”.

“But this is not about Robert Nairac, this is about his family,” he added. “The family didn’t do anything wrong... whether we believe the stories or not.

“It doesn’t make any difference to the fact that his family are still distraught and would like his remains back.”

Conspiracy theorists will dismiss evidence clearing Nairac, he accepts. “But at the end of the day he was a very junior officer.” Why would army sources wait 40 years to deploy such alibis, he asks.

READ MORE: Captain Robert Nairac: ‘the perfect soldier’

READ MORE: Nairac’s remains did not go into mincer, says investigator

Captain Nairac: ‘The consummate, perfect soldier’

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Captain Robert Nairac, who was abducted and murdered in south Armagh 40 years ago today, is now remembered as a “legend” in his own regiment who was awarded the George Cross – despite dying at only 29 years of age.

The undercover Grenadier Guards Captain was murdered by the IRA on May 14, 1977 after visiting a pub in Dromintee in south Armagh, possibly to meet a contact.

Six people have been convicted of his murder, however his English parents went to their graves without the comfort of having his body returned for a Catholic burial.

Born in Mauritius in 1948 to Barbara, a Protestant, and Maurice, a Catholic, he went to private Catholic school at Ampleforth and then Lincoln College Oxford where he studied Medieval History

Robert went on to become an expert angler and falconer and at school made friends with an Irish student, going on to visit friends in Dublin and stay with a family in Spiddle in Connemara.

In 1971, aged 23, he joined the Grenadier Guards and was first posted to Belfast two years later where he became well known while patrolling streets of Ardoyne.

But by his fourth tour he had become an experienced military intelligence officer based at Bessbrook Mill – and was drawing ever closer to his brutal fate.

A former guardsman in the same regiment, Alan Barry, says Capt Nairac is still held in the highest possible esteem in the Grenadier Guards.

“Captain Nairac is so well thought of that his portrait hangs in the Grenadier Guards officers’ mess at Wellington Barracks in London,” he told the News Letter. “His picture and his life story are also prominent in the regiment’s museum there

“He was a brave man. He was an officer and he led by example. He did not expect his men to do anything he would not do. He volunteered for Northern Ireland because he loved Ireland and thought he could make a difference. He interacted with the Irish community and genuinely believed peace should be brought back to Ireland.

“I know people who served with him. They all described him as a leader of men – the consummate, perfect soldier.

“He still has two elderly sisters – it would be amazing if they could give him a Christian burial.”

READ MORE: Encouraging fresh leads in search for Nairac

READ MORE: Nairac’s remains did not go into mincer, says investigator

The claims that the captain was involved in murder were “unproven and completely false” he says. “He was not even in those areas at the time,” he added.

“We did not collude with loyalists to murder civilians or IRA. Even the RTE documentary [on May 2] cleared him of involvement in that. He was an officer in my battalion, he was a legend in our regiment.”

On 13 February 1979 Nairac was posthumously awarded the George Cross for his service. The citation reads in part:

“On the night of 14/15 May 1977 Captain Nairac was abducted from a village in South Armagh by at least seven men. Despite his fierce resistance he was overpowered and taken across the border into the nearby Republic of Ireland where he was subjected to a succession of exceptionally savage assaults in an attempt to extract information which would have put other lives and future operations at serious risk ... His assassin subsequently said ‘He never told us anything’...Captain Nairac’s exceptional courage and acts of the greatest heroism in circumstances of extreme peril showed devotion to duty and personal courage second to none.”

Mr Barry, who was born in Dublin, met Sinn Fein’s Martin McGuinness at a rally in Dublin in 2016, with the intention of seeing Captain Nairac’s body returned.

“I was very impressed with a lot of what he had to say,” he said. They met afterwards and warm words and warm handshakes were exchanged.

“I asked him privately about Robert Nairac and we shook hands and emailed each other.

“I got a very polite email back which said he was committed to the commission for the disappeared and cannot interfere in that.

“In public we shook hands but now I think that was all an act. The IRA know where his body is and we want it back. They got to bury their dead with full honours. All we want is to do the same.”

A Sinn Fein spokesperson responded that it has “consistently called for anyone with information that could lead to the retrieval of bodies in the outstanding cases, including Robert Nairac, to come forward to the Commission [for the disappeared]”.

• Anyone with information on the Disappeared can contact the ICLVR in complete confidence on 00800 555 85500, by writing to ICLVR, PO Box 10827, Dublin 2. or via the website www.iclvr.ie

Read more views on Capt Nairac in Monday’s paper

READ MORE: Encouraging fresh leads in search for Nairac

READ MORE: Nairac’s remains did not go into mincer, says investigator

I can end unionist domination in north Belfast - John Finucane

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The new face of Sinn Fein politics is convinced he can end decades of unionist domination in North Belfast.

John Finucane, whose solicitor father Pat was murdered by loyalist paramilitaries in one of the most infamous cases of the Troubles, believes the republican party can take the seat for the first time and cause “quite a ripple right across Ireland.”

But the DUP’s Nigel Dodds, whose own family was attacked by IRA gunmen in 1996, says Mr Finucane may be a new candidate but claims he follows the same “extreme republican ideology”.

Mr Dodds - who has held the seat since 2001 - also attacked the republican party’s abstentionist policy.

While running candidates in general elections Sinn Fein have always refused to take their seats at Westminster, but still insist their voice will be heard, especially during Brexit negotiations.

Mr Dodds says it would be a “tragedy” to leave North Belfast voiceless in Westminster.

Situated on the shores of Belfast Lough, the constituency includes some of the most divided and deprived communities in Northern Ireland where sectarian tensions between the Protestant loyalist and Catholic nationalists are high.

Nationalist Ardoyne has been hit by almost annual scenes of rioting following contentious Twelfth of July Orange Order parades.

“The main thing about North Belfast, it wants, needs and deserves a voice to speak up for them, to stand up for them, especially at a time when Stormont is not working,” says Mr Dodds.

“To leave North Belfast completely voiceless and unrepresented would be a tragedy for everybody.

“I don’t contemplate for a minute that Sinn Fein will win the seat,” he adds.

Mr Dodds believes that all Sinn Fein candidates “follow the same extreme republican ideology of Gerry Adams”.

“The candidate in North Belfast was nominated by (former IRA prisoner) Gerry Kelly. They don’t offer anything different to what Sinn Fein has offered in the past which is boycott, negativity, abstention.

“If you want a positive vision for Northern Ireland in the UK and someone standing up for North Belfast then you have to vote for me.”

Traditionally, North Belfast has been a safe unionist seat since Cecil Walker won it in 1983 but demographics have changed and according to the 2011 Census Catholics are now in the majority.

The result of the recent Stormont election - where Sinn Fein came within one seat of being level with the DUP - has emboldened the republican party.

Mr Finucane said he would not be running if he did not believe he could win.

“The gap is getting a lot smaller. There is a degree of energy and confidence in progressive politics.

“I have even had feedback from police officers who have contacted me to congratulate me in what I am doing, wishing me all the best.

“Not a lot of people would have thought that was possible a few years ago. I’m chuffed at that. People from different strands of society are showing there is an appetite for progressive, equal politics,” says Mr Finucane.

The Belfast solicitor accused the DUP of equating abstentionism “with complete inactivity and irrelevance”.

“With respect, I think the MPs from here who have been in the chamber have been as close to irrelevant as you can get.

“In relation to Brexit, with regards here, we (Sinn Fein) are going for special designated status. We are not going to get that by talking to Theresa May whether that is in the chamber or outside.

“The only way we are going to get any progress on this is by engaging the way we have been engaging which is directly with the Irish government and other member states,” he says.

Mr Finucane is certain that the only party able to unsit an MP is Sinn Fein.

“If you vote SDLP in this election you are enabling Nigel Dodds to potentially go back to Westminster. You are talking about an MP who is in the chamber and actively campaigning for Brexit,” he says

“There is a unique opportunity at the minute that North Belfast can send a very clear message and cause quite a ripple right across Ireland,” adds Mr Finucane.

Mr Finucane was the party’s surprise choice rather than party veteran and former IRA prisoner Gerry Kelly.

Dr Jonny Byrne from the school of criminology and politics at Ulster University said his selection is seen as an attempt by Sinn Fein to reach out to new voters.

“It is a change in the status quo where we are moving away from the traditional Kelly versus Dodds. It is a fundamental shift in what we are used to.

“Sinn Fein believe after the assembly election that North Belfast is a winnable seat and have decided to throw significant resources into the campaign in the constituency,” Dr Byrne says.

He adds: “Finucane ticks all the right boxes - he is young, professional, he has the name recognition, he is a new generation of Sinn Fein. He is fresh and energised and is offering something different. It is definitely a constituency to watch. “

The Ulster Unionists are not running a candidate in the constituency giving the DUP a free run for the unionist vote.

The SDLP rejected a call by Sinn Fein to stand aside in the constituency and has selected the party press officer, Martin McAuley, as the North Belfast candidate.

While the SDLP has insisted Mr McAuley is not a “token” candidate, the way seems clear for a straight battle between the two political heavyweights, Dodds and Finucane.

Mr McAuley said: “The choice here is simple.

“An MP who has betrayed the will of his constituents, an MP who won’t turn up to take on Theresa May or an SDLP MP who will take a stand and take this seat to oppose the Tories at every turn.”

Candidates standing in Belfast North: Nigel Dodds (DUP) John Finucane (Sinn Fein) Martin McAuley (SDLP) Sam Nelson (Alliance) Malachai George O’Hara (Green Party) Gemma Weir (The Workers Party).

Pope appoints African priest as representative to Ireland

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Pope Francis has appointed an African priest as apostolic nuncio to Ireland for the first time.

Archbishop Jude Thaddeus Okolo, 60, from Nigeria is due to take up the role during the summer.

He will be the Vatican’s diplomatic representative in Ireland.

The outgoing papal nuncio to Ireland Charles Brown will move to Albania to take up a new diplomatic post.

Archbishop Okolo was born in 1956 and ordained a priest in 1983.

He holds a doctorate in canon law.

His first assignment in the Diplomatic Service of the Holy See was in Sri Lanka.

He has also served in Haiti, Switzerland and Australia.

He speaks Igbo, English, French, Italian, Czech, Spanish and German.

Eamon Martin, Archbishop of Armagh, said: “I warmly welcome the appointment by His Holiness Pope Francis of Archbishop Jude Thaddeus Okolo as Apostolic Nuncio to Ireland and I wish him many blessings in his new role.

“Archbishop Okolo’s rich experience in the diplomatic service of the Holy See means that he brings many gifts to bear on his new mission in Ireland.

“I pray that his time among us as the representative of the Holy Father will be blessed and fruitful.”

Terror victims ‘sick to back teeth’ of being ignored

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Families of innocent people murdered by the IRA have been practically ignored whilst hundreds of millions are spent investigating incidents involving the security forces, according to the UUP’s Tom Elliott.

He was speaking after it was revealed on Friday that prosecutors are considering whether various charges should be brought against 18 soldiers over their involvement in Bloody Sunday.

Thirteen people were shot dead when members of the Parachute Regiment opened fire on civil rights demonstrators in Londonderry in 1972. A 14th person died later.

Mr Elliott, UUP Fermanagh and South Tyrone Westminster candidate, said: “The announcement that the PPS is considering a variety of charges against former soldiers in relation to Bloody Sunday highlights the lack of proportionality in terms of dealing with the past.

“The IRA and its supporters have tried to use Bloody Sunday as an excuse for their crimes against the people of Northern Ireland and this will continue to be used as another propaganda tool to demonise the British Army and the rest of the security forces.”

He said that hundreds of millions of pounds have been spent on an inquiry into Bloody Sunday and an ongoing police investigation employing dozens of investigators.

“Meanwhile, others such as the families of the innocent people slaughtered on the streets of Enniskillen by the Provisional IRA on Remembrance Sunday 1987 can’t get an investigation into their loved ones’ murders.

“It’s a disgrace the way the Enniskillen families and other families have been treated. People are absolutely sick to their back teeth of the way the innocent people of Enniskillen, Teebane, Bloody Friday, La Mon and others have been practically ignored. They deserve equality, they deserve respect – their loved ones had the right to life which the IRA took away.”

He added: “We have been calling for years for investigations into these IRA atrocities but little has happened. It’s as if they don’t matter. It has to end.”

On Saturday the News Letter revealed that the deaths of terrorists make up more than one-third of outstanding Troubles-related deaths which are set to be probed by inquests.

Relatives of men murdered by the IRA have been critical of the figures, with one of them – Serena Hamilton – asking simply: “How do you justify that?”

She noted that among the deaths are the eight-strong IRA gang killed by the SAS at Loughgall, the circumstances of which are already widely known.

Republic’s first non-denominational cemetery reopens

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The Republic of Ireland’s first non-denominational cemetery has reopened after nearly a century and a half.

The “garden” graveyard at Goldenbridge was founded by Catholic emancipator Daniel O’Connell in 1828 and welcomed those of all religions and none following the restrictions of the Penal Laws.

It was closed 40 years later after a dispute with the British military authorities which operated at nearby Richmond Barracks but reopened on Sunday to mark the 170th anniversary of O’Connell’s death.

John Green, chairman of organisers the Glasnevin Trust, said he was gladdened.

“A hundred and eighty nine years on from the first burial and 148 years since its ‘closure’, the Trust sees a renewed role for the cemetery.

“Not only will it be open to new burials, but the cemetery is inextricably linked with the local community’s efforts to revitalise the area.”

Unlike churchyards, garden cemeteries were independent of a parish church and were located outside the city in what were then quiet suburbs. These cemeteries became known as garden cemeteries.

Set on two acres of land, Goldenbridge incorporates many of the classical features that were to dominate the 19th century. Its delineated pathways and high walls create an oasis of tranquillity in what is now the heart of a busy suburb. according to the Trust.

From the time of the Reformation, Catholics were not permitted to have any cemeteries of their own.

Controversy over the restriction involved O’Connell, who succeeded in establishing a cemetery open to all religions and none.

Following a dispute with the British War Office it was finally agreed that Goldenbridge would remain open to burials for those who already had plots but would close to new burials.

Burials have continued at a slower rate since then and today Goldenbridge holds the graves of many historically significant figures

Among those buried there are WT Cosgrove, first head of government of the Irish Free state and one of the most influential political figures of 20th century Ireland.

The reopening of Goldenbridge was marked just as it was for its original opening in 1828, with a ceremonial concert.

Events included a re-enactment of O’Connell’s founding speech, music and a wreath-laying ceremony.


PSNI warns NI may already be infected by virus

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The PSNI has warned workers across Northern Ireland that their systems may already be infeicted by a computer virus and to be on the alert as they return to work on Monday.

Family doctors in the Republic of Ireland have also been warned not to use their practice computers on Monday until they are certain their anti-virus security systems are up to date after a mass hack which has spread around the world since Friday.

The PSNI said some people’s systems may already be infected and waiting to activate after the weekend.

Friday’s attack infected more than 125,000 computer systems, and UK security researcher “MalwareTech”, who helped to limit the ransomware attack, predicted “another one coming ... quite likely on Monday”.

The virus, which took control of users’ files, spread to 100 countries, including Spain, France and Russia.

In England, 48 NHS trusts fell victim, as did 13 NHS bodies in Scotland.

Some hospitals were forced to cancel procedures and appointments, as ambulances were directed to neighbouring hospitals free from the computer virus.

The software locks files or a whole machine until a ransom is paid.

The malware has caused severe disruption to health services, industry, transport, academia and law enforcement around the world.

Detective Chief Inspector Douglas Grant, head of PSNI Cyber Crime Centre, said: “While no incidents have been reported in Northern Ireland as yet, we do expect further infections to come to light globally over the next week and we cannot rule out the possibility that local systems may be vulnerable.

“As people return to work tomorrow after the weekend, many will have unopened, potentially infected emails in their inboxes, or their systems may already be infected and are waiting to activate.

“It is of the utmost importance that individuals and organisations act to ensure the integrity of our local cyber networks and take appropriate action to reduce the threat posed by cyber criminals.”

In the Republic, the Health Service Executive (HSE) cut its network off from external communications as a precaution.

The decision means its facilities will be unable to receive emails from outside the organisation.

But HSE chief information officer Richard Corbridge said the impact on patients is unlikely to be significant because email is rarely used to communicate with patients.

The PSNI said the latest advice and patches are now available to protect current systems via: www.ncsc.gov.uk/guidance/ransomware-latest-ncsc-guidance

Beatification ceremony for priest raised as Protestant

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A Catholic priest who was raised as a Protestant has been beatified in the first such ceremony in Ireland.

Fr John Sullivan was recognised for his work with the sick and dying.

It is the first step on the road to sainthood.

Cardinal Angelo Amato said Fr Sullivan had been “exemplary” in his religious duties.

He added: “Those who knew him considered him a saint, and in my opinion he had reached a high degree of perfection.

“Even though he came from a rich family, once he became religious he was oblivious to comfort and contented himself with what was necessary,” said Cardinal Amato.

The member of the Jesuit order was born in Dublin in 1861 and attended Portora Royal School in Enniskillen in Co Fermanagh.

Representatives from the school were present at the ceremony in North Dublin’s Gardiner Street Church.

It was conducted by the cardinal assisted by the Archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin.

After the beatification Fr Sullivan will be called “Blessed” and will be celebrated annually on May 8.

During Saturday’s ceremony relics relating to him were blessed, including the “Sullivan Cross” which he would take with him when visiting the sick.

The Church of Ireland Archbishop of Dublin, Michael Jackson, was also present.

Portora’s other alumni included the playwrights Oscar Wilde and Samuel Beckett.

After leaving the school, he studied at Trinity College Dublin.

In 1896 aged 35 he converted to Catholicism before entering the Jesuit order in 1900.

The clergyman taught at Clongowes Wood College in Dublin until his death in 1933, aged 71.

Shop vacancies deteriorate as NI footfall improves

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Retail footfall in the province enjoyed its first growth of the year rising by 0.1% in April over the same month in 2016 according to the latest statistics from the Northern Ireland Retail Consortium (NIRC).

Though modest, the figure is well above the three-month average of -2.7 per cent and the twelve-month average of -0.4 per cent.

In April, footfall fell on the high street and in retail parks in Northern Ireland, but showed the strongest growth in footfall to shopping centres in the UK.

On a more negative note the report produced in conjunction with Springboard, said the town centre vacancy rate rose to 14.4% in April from 14% in January, above the UK average of 9.3% and the highest rate of all the UK nations and regions.

“These results are something of a mixed bag for NI’s retailers,” said NIRC director Aodhán Connolly.

“The unwelcome but modest rise in the NI shop vacancy rate is still significant when you take into account the tiny growth in footfall.

“While any growth in shopper footfall is welcome, this has been largely driven by our shopping centres which had the strongest growth across the UK.

“With the positive distortion because of a late Easter, these figures should really have been better.

“The current domestic political uncertainty is leading to economic uncertainty not just for our industry but for Northern Ireland consumers.

“To be frank, it is high time for Northern Ireland’s politicians to get back round the table, thrash out a governing arrangement and crack on with delivering reformed rates, providing leadership on Brexit, and making Northern Ireland a more competitive place to do business. The current stalemate is not delivering for anyone.”

Diane Wehrle, marketing and insights director at Springboard said: “

“The vacancy rate in Northern Ireland weakened slightly, moving to 14.4 per cent from 14.0 per cent in January. And whilst the UK rate strengthened marginally from 9.4 per cent in January to 9.3 per cent, vacancies in eight of the ten geographic areas of the UK rose, with improvements only in London, the East and the North and Yorkshire.”

Sharpest rise in NI output so far in 2017

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Northern Ireland businesses enjoyed the strongest rise in business activity of the year-to-date in April according to the latest Ulster Bank PMI report.

While new orders continued to increase solidly, companies said they remained optimistic of further output growth over the coming year said the repor produced for Ulster Bank by Markit.

The rate of job creation accelerated in the period while on the price front, both input costs and output charges continued to rise sharply.

“Northern Ireland’s private sector has had an encouraging start to the second quarter of 2017,” said Richard Ramsey, chief economist for Northern Ireland at the Ulster Bank.

“This was reflected in faster rates of growth in activity, export orders and employment.

“Indeed, output rose at its fastest pace so far this year, and firms increased their staffing levels more quickly than at any point in the last 10 months.”

Nevertheless, he said inflationary pressures remained a challenge, with sterling’s recent bout of weakness pushing costs higher.

Input cost inflation remained most acute for manufacturers, but he said retailers and service sector firms were far from immune, having seen cost bases increase at the fastest rates since September 2008 and March 2011 respectively.

“Retailers have enjoyed a cross-border shopping tailwind since June last year.

“Not surprisingly though the rapid rates of growth in retail sales activity have eased significantly.

“The pace of job creation in retailing has also slowed, to its weakest rate since July 2015.

“In terms of the wider services sector, its recovery has been rather subdued of late. However, April’s PMI survey reveals a marked improvement in conditions.”

Service sector output hit a 12-month high, whilst new orders and employment hit 13-month and seven-month highs respectively, Mr Ramsey added.

Outside of services, manufacturing activity remains relatively buoyant, but construction firms saw activity stagnate and new orders contract in April.

“Overall, despite the ongoing uncertainty with Brexit, Northern Ireland’s private sector firms remain confident about growth prospects for the year ahead,” he said.

“However, they are not as optimistic as their counterparts in Great Britain.”

New fund to invest in large energy users in province

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Businesses racking up annual energy bills of £150,000 or more are set to benefit from a new fund launched in Northern Ireland by Vayu Energy.

The company, which supplies natural gas, electricity and renewables to the industrial and commercial market in Ireland and the UK, has set up the Vayu Energy Fund to help large energy users to achieve cost savings by investing in projects targeted at reducing consumption.

Vayu’s business customers and prospective customers are eligible to apply for the fund and all energy management projects will be considered, including the upgrade of dated facilities, machinery or technology and the installation of new, efficient systems.

The fund has been set up in response to customer demand following a recent survey by the energy firm. Lack of investment and the misuse of energy were found to be the biggest hurdles for businesses on the island of Ireland striving to reduce their energy bills.

“This fund could bring significant benefits to businesses in Northern Ireland and, with no cap on the size or the type of project we will consider, we are making this investment as accessible as possible,” said fund manager Ciaran Gahan, energy efficiency manager at Vayu.

“We know that if businesses are more energy efficient that they can reduce their energy cost by up to 20 percent.

“While this is a new funding model for Northern Ireland, Ireland and indeed Vayu, our partners Gas Natural Fenosa (GNF) bring with them a high level of expertise and experience which will secure a win-win scenario for all successful applications.”

General election: Dodds confident he can see off new SF challenger in North Belfast

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The new face of Sinn Fein politics is convinced he can end decades of unionist domination in North Belfast.

John Finucane, whose solicitor father Pat was murdered by loyalist paramilitaries in one of the most infamous cases of the Troubles, believes the republican party can take the seat for the first time and cause “quite a ripple right across Ireland”.

But the DUP’s Nigel Dodds, whose own family was attacked by IRA gunmen in 1996, says Mr Finucane may be a new candidate but claims he follows the same “extreme republican ideology”.

Mr Dodds – who has held the seat since 2001 – also attacked the republican party’s abstentionist policy.

While running candidates in general elections Sinn Fein have always refused to take their seats at Westminster, but still insist their voice will be heard, especially during Brexit negotiations.

Mr Dodds says it would be a “tragedy” to leave North Belfast voiceless in Westminster.

Situated on the shores of Belfast Lough, the constituency includes some of the most divided and deprived communities in Northern Ireland where sectarian tensions between the Protestant loyalist and Catholic nationalists are high.

Nationalist Ardoyne has been hit by almost annual scenes of rioting following contentious Twelfth of July Orange Order parades.

“The main thing about North Belfast, it wants, needs and deserves a voice to speak up for them, to stand up for them, especially at a time when Stormont is not working,” says Mr Dodds.

“To leave North Belfast completely voiceless and unrepresented would be a tragedy for everybody.

“I don’t contemplate for a minute that Sinn Fein will win the seat,” he added.

Mr Dodds believes that all Sinn Fein candidates “follow the same extreme republican ideology of Gerry Adams”.

“The candidate in North Belfast was nominated by (former IRA prisoner) Gerry Kelly. They don’t offer anything different to what Sinn Fein has offered in the past which is boycott, negativity, abstention.

“If you want a positive vision for Northern Ireland in the UK and someone standing up for North Belfast then you have to vote for me.”

Traditionally, North Belfast has been a safe unionist seat since Cecil Walker won it in 1983 but demographics have changed and according to the 2011 Census Catholics are now in the majority.

The result of the recent Stormont election – where Sinn Fein came within one seat of being level with the DUP – has emboldened the republican party.

Mr Finucane said he would not be running if he did not believe he could win.

“The gap is getting a lot smaller. There is a degree of energy and confidence in progressive politics.

“I have even had feedback from police officers who have contacted me to congratulate me in what I am doing, wishing me all the best.

“Not a lot of people would have thought that was possible a few years ago. I’m chuffed at that. People from different strands of society are showing there is an appetite for progressive, equal politics,” said Mr Finucane.

The Belfast solicitor accused the DUP of equating abstentionism “with complete inactivity and irrelevance”.

“With respect, I think the MPs from here who have been in the chamber have been as close to irrelevant as you can get.

“In relation to Brexit, with regards here, we (Sinn Fein) are going for special designated status. We are not going to get that by talking to Theresa May whether that is in the chamber or outside.

“The only way we are going to get any progress on this is by engaging the way we have been engaging which is directly with the Irish government and other member states,” he said.

Mr Finucane is certain that the only party able to unsit an MP is Sinn Fein.

“If you vote SDLP in this election you are enabling Nigel Dodds to potentially go back to Westminster. You are talking about an MP who is in the chamber and actively campaigning for Brexit,” he said.

“There is a unique opportunity at the minute that North Belfast can send a very clear message and cause quite a ripple right across Ireland.”

Mr Finucane was the party’s surprise choice rather than party veteran and former IRA prisoner Gerry Kelly.

Dr Jonny Byrne from the school of criminology and politics at Ulster University said his selection is seen as an attempt by Sinn Fein to reach out to new voters.

“It is a change in the status quo where we are moving away from the traditional Kelly versus Dodds. It is a fundamental shift in what we are used to.

“Sinn Fein believe after the Assembly election that North Belfast is a winnable seat and have decided to throw significant resources into the campaign in the constituency,” Dr Byrne said.

“Finucane ticks all the right boxes – he is young, professional, he has the name recognition, he is a new generation of Sinn Fein. He is fresh and energised and is offering something different. It is definitely a constituency to watch. “

The Ulster Unionists are not running a candidate in the constituency giving the DUP a free run for the unionist vote.

The SDLP rejected a call by Sinn Fein to stand aside in the constituency and has selected the party press officer, Martin McAuley, as the North Belfast candidate.

Frustrated Kingsmills survivor renews plea to Dublin for evidence

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The sole survivor of the Kingsmills massacre has issued a passionate plea to the southern authorities to hand over what information they hold on the gang behind the atrocity, as the inquest into the killings resumes in Belfast today.

Ten Protestant textile workers were gunned down during an IRA roadside ambush in south Armagh in January 1976.

The legacy inquest opened in May 2016 but stopped soon after when police belatedly matched a palm print on the getaway vehicle to a suspect. However, a decision was taken in February not to prosecute.

Sole survivor Alan Black met Enda Kenny in March 2015 when the taoiseach promised that all information held by southern authorities would be made available to the inquest.

The attack was planned from Co Louth and the gunmen fled back there afterwards. The top three suspects have also served sentences in the south for terrorism.

Four of the weapons were recovered in the south and the suspected getaway minibus was also hijacked from there.

But Mr Black said that two years after promises of full disclosure from Mr Kenny, no significant information has been released by Dublin. It is understood 90 pages have been released, 60 of which are newspaper clippings.

He met Irish Foreign Office officials in February, when one said to him: “You know maybe they [the Garda] have got nothing.” But Mr Black replied: “No, they have never made that excuse.”

Recent media reports have confirmed to him that substantial information is being held back.

“It is over two years in March that the taoiseach promised to hand all that stuff over. It is just ridiculous that it is two years later and they have sent nothing.

“They say that they can’t order anybody but what is to stop them volunteering somebody. If can’t order a Guard to come up why can’t they ask the Gardai for a volunteer?”

Last month relatives of some of those killed threatened to pull out of the inquest if Dublin does not cooperate.

A spokesman for the Irish government responded that it is “committed to cooperating fully with the coroner’s inquest into the murders at Kingsmills”, and that “significant evidential material has already been transferred” under specific legislative arrangements.

Every effort is being made at this time to facilitate further cooperation, he added.

• Inquest hearings are scheduled from today in Belfast until June 2.


Top Tory’s call for end to Troubles prosecutions ‘gross naivety’

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A leading Tory who recently headed up Westminster’s defence committee has been accused of “gross naivety” for strongly backing an end to all Troubles prosecutions in favour of a “truth recovery” process.

Dr Julian Lewis called upon families of paramilitary victims to be “big-hearted” and accept that sacrificing the chance of seeing their loved ones’ killers convicted is the price they must pay to protect ex-military men from prosecution.

In an interview with the News Letter, the erstwhile committee chairman said in place of prosecutions he would like to see South African-style tribunals set up, at which ex-paramilitaries could describe what they did without fear of prosecution.

Kenny Donaldson of Innocent Victims United (IVU), reiterated that his organisation is “firmly” opposed to any amnesty, and Dr Lewis’ proposals were essentially “Sinn Fein/PIRA policy”.

He added that South Africa’s own experiences with truth and reconciliation for apartheid-era crimes were no “raging success”.

Dr Lewis was speaking to the News Letter just weeks after overseeing a major report by his committee.

It had recommended a “statute of limitations” for alleged crimes committed by military personnel in Northern Ireland, essentially barring prosecution of them for pre-1998 crimes. The report suggested also extending this to the RUC.

Whilst it stopped short of calling for any other groups to be included, some observers feared the report pointed to the future possibility of a general amnesty.

Now Dr Lewis has explained in detail that his own personal views are for exactly that – although he doesn’t use the word ‘amnesty’, because “it’s a very emotive word”.

Any chance of true justice disappeared in 1998 anyway, he said, with the agreement that paramilitaries would only serve “pathetically short” sentences if convicted.

He said: “The whole justice system was completely skewed by the sentencing legislation that was passed, which basically says no matter how many people were killed by terrorists or paramilitaries of any sort, they won’t serve more than two years in jail.

“In the course of our inquiry, it became clear that it hasn’t been established whether that limitation applies to soldiers or not.

“But if it doesn’t apply to soldiers, then it’s obviously massively unjust that even if they did commit an offence that they should serve perhaps a life sentence, whereas multiple murdering terrorists would serve only two years.”

The idea of a “comprehensive statute of limitations” covering the whole Troubles is now “blindingly obvious” – and must be “coupled with a truth recovery mechanism”.

“That’d be a far better way of enabling bereaved families to find out what had really happened once people knew that they weren’t at risk of prosecution,” he said.

“We should take a leaf out of the South Africans’ book where they simply said the only way to deal with these terrible things that happened over a very long period is to draw a line under it for everybody.

“That I believe is something we could and should do ... because, as I say, when you’ve reduced it to the point that people convicted of the most heinous offences are going to serve at most a derisory two-year sentence, nobody is going to feel the punishment has met the crime, even if those people are pursued.”

He said “if the price of protecting our soldiers who are all that stood between Northern Ireland and complete bloody chaos” is that paramilitaries go unprosecuted, “my personal view is we owe it to our soldiers to pay that price”.

He added: “I’d hope families would be big-hearted enough to accept that this is something they could agree to.”

Asked if this is a majority view in the Tory party, he said: “The answer is I just don’t know. I haven’t asked them...

“Let me put it this way. I didn’t think it was a significant prospect that this argument might win the day, I wouldn’t be spending all this time personally promoting it.”

Kenny Donaldson of victims’ body IVU said: “Mr Lewis has in many ways done a service in saying what he has said, because the covert language in the [defence committee’s] report has now become the overt spoken language.

“We raised strong concerns in the aftermath of the report’s publication believing it paved the way to amnesty.

“The old adage can be adapted – if it looks like a blanket amnesty, if it smells like a blanket amnesty, if it is rooted in the language of constructive ambiguity then it’s most probably a blanket amnesty.

“We stand firmly against any overt amnesty being pursued just as we have consistently spoken out against the covert tactics by previous UK government administrations designed to placate terrorism and its’ proponents through the subversion of the natural criminal justice system.”

When it comes to the prospect of a South African-style Truth and Reconciliation Commission being enacted in Northern Ireland, Mr Donaldson added: “Mr Lewis has demonstrated gross naivety in proposing what is a Sinn Fein/PIRA policy.

“There will not ever be reconciliation of our past (victims’ and survivors’ present and future) until all those who actively contributed to the brokenness account for their actions, recognising those actions were wrong, unjustified and wholly futile.

“Remorse, repentance and restitution are precursors for reconciliation to be possible.

“Contrary to the jaundiced view of many, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in South Africa was not the raging success suggested by Mr Lewis and others.

“Talk to the victims of the terror and violence in South Africa, they are the constituency that matter – not governments or the perpetrators.”

Whistleblower allegations prompt inquiry into £80m health contracts

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The Civil Service is investigating a whistleblower’s allegations of a potential conflict of interest in an £80 million health project, it has confirmed.

The Fraud Investigation Services, a Civil Service-wide unit which examines serious allegations, is examining the claims which relate to two new £40 million health centres in Lisburn and Newry which were to be built using a form of public-private partnership.

The whistleblower came forward on December 20 – at the height of the RHI scandal, just five days after Jonathan Bell’s explosive television interview with Stephen Nolan.

The exact nature of the allegations, who they relate to or the seriousness with which they are being taken by investigators is not yet clear.

Details of the situation first emerged in InfraNews, a specialist business intelligence publication.

In a statement, the Department of Finance said: “In December 2016 whistleblower allegations were received by the Department of Finance’s Central Procurement Directorate.

“A team within the department are making inquiries into the allegations including that of a potential conflict of interest and the whistleblower has been made aware of this.”

However, the department went on to defend the process whereby the preferred bidder for the contracts had been selected.

It said: “The selection of the preferred bidder for each of the Lisburn and Newry projects was made on the basis of clear and transparent award criteria which were shared with all the bidders at the commencement of the procurement (this was a Competitive Dialogue Procurement process which followed the Contract Regulations relevant at the time of commencement of these competitions).”

In a statement, the Department of Health said: “The Department of Finance’s Central Procurement Directorate received a letter from a whistleblower containing allegations relating to the procurement of the Newry and Lisburn Primary Care centre projects on December 20 2016.

“The NICS Internal Audit and Fraud Investigation Services are currently investigating the allegations therein. The whistleblower has been informed of the investigation.

“The department does not comment on ongoing investigations.”

The initial decision to build the new health centres by involving the private sector was taken by the then DUP health minister Edwin Poots in 2013.

Mr Poots did so via what is known as ‘ministerial direction’ – a mechanism whereby ministers formally order their civil servants to pursue a certain course of action if the Civil Service has raised some objection.

Such directions are rare but have been issued multiple times over the decade of devolved government by ministers of all parties.

When asked what the Civil Service objection had been which had led to him using a ministerial direction, Mr Poots told the News Letter: “There wasn’t an objection per se.

“They just said it would be better if I did it because as accounting officer, using revenue funds for capital projects ... we were using revenue funds because we wanted to accelerate the TYC programme and ensure that we could move that on apace and we would actually make savings on the revenue side in due course.”

Mr Poots said that he “would have no idea how the preferred bidder was allocated, to be honest. That wasn’t something that I would have been directly involved in”.

And the former minister stressed that he had no link whatsoever to anyone who stood to gain financially from the decision.

The Lagan Valley MLA said: “I did what I did because I believed it was the right thing to do and that’s just it. I would have pushed things ahead and pushed things ahead quickly had I been allowed to on a whole lot of that stuff but obviously I left office and didn’t have the opportunity to finish the job. But I have absolute confidence in what I was doing and that I was doing the right thing.”

Evidence clears Robert Nairac of murders he has been linked to: author

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A former diplomat who has authored a book on the life of Captain Robert Nairac says that extensive documentary evidence proves that he was out of the country when murders linked to him were being planned and committed.

Alistair Kerr, 64, a retired diplomat from Lincolnshire, was partly inspired to write his book because he attended a lecture by Capt Nairac in 1973 while considering joining the forces.

His book, Betrayal: The Murder of Robert Nairac, was published two years ago but is just about to be republished with updated information.

Six men have been convicted in relation to the IRA murder at Ravensdale in Co Louth – which took place 40 years ago yesterday – but efforts to recover his body continue.

In Saturday’s News Letter Geoff Knupfer, lead investigator with the Independent Commission for the Location of Victims’ Remains (ICLVR), said the main obstacle to cooperation in recovering Capt Nairac’s remains are rumours that he had been a member of the SAS involved in a string of murders and bombings.

But in his book Mr Kerr collates copious documentary evidence which he said proves the officer was not in the country during the crimes – nor in the planning phases.

• May 17 1974: The Dublin and Monaghan bombings: Nairac had been on a training course in England with other undercover soldiers and was being trained intensively for months beforehand in England.

• January 5 1975: The murder of senior IRA man John Francis Green: Nairac was on temporary duty in Londonderry on a secret mission; three people have given him an alibi.

• July 31 1975: The Miami Showband massacre: Nairac started out at 4am driving from London to Scotland for a fishing holiday. In the run-up to the trip he had been preparing for an important exercise on August 14.

• January 5 1976: The Kingsmills massacre: On January 4-5 Nairac was in Surrey frantically busy with final preparations for his battalion’s deployment to Kenya.

• April 15 1976: The murder of senior IRA man Peter Cleary: Nairac was attending the Junior Command and Staff Course at the Staff College in England.

Allegations also miss the fact that Nairac was very religious, Kerr said, with “a straight-arrow Catholic conscience” as described by Luke Jennings, who had been closely mentored by him.

In 1973 Nairac was being referred to internally as “one of the Army’s greatest experts on Ireland” and by 1976 he was seen as “the answer to the south Armagh PIRA”; senior army officers “seemed to be in awe of him”.

It would make no sense, Mr Kerr said, to use such a valued officer to supposedly commit such crimes, instead of using more junior soldiers.

“I have yet to see any convincing evidence that Nairac knew any of the Glenanne Gang,” he said of alleged links between the officer and loyalists. However, it “cannot be quite ruled out” given that he had extensive contacts, even among republicans.

But overall, he concurs with the report by senior southern Justice Henry Barron, which examined the Dublin-Monaghan bombings and Nairac; it found no conclusive proof of collusion.

Upper Bann constituency profile: Clash of liberal and traditional unionist values

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From the southern shores of Lough Neagh to the rolling hills of Loughbrickland in mid-Down, the idyllic beauty of Upper Bann surrounds some of the most bitterly contested space in Northern Ireland.

The names Portadown and Drumcree have been synonymous with protest and disorder over the years and, despite enjoying a sustained period out of the media spotlight, sectarian tensions remain not far below the surface.

Nearby Lurgan also experienced more than its fair share of violence throughout the Troubles and, like Portadown, the two main communities remain relatively polarised.

In more recent times, the Craigavon/Lurgan area has emerged as a hotbed of dissident republican activity and the first PSNI officer to be murdered by terrorists, Stephen Carroll, was shot dead by dissidents at Lismore Manor in 2009.

The other, less polarised, centre of population in Upper Bann, Banbridge, had its town centre destroyed by a republican bomb attack in August 1988 – two weeks before an almost identical Real IRA blast claimed the lives of 29 people in Omagh. This hotly contested parliamentary seat was traditionally Ulster Unionist (UUP) before the DUP’s David Simpson topped the poll in 2005.

Having won the Noble Peace Prize – jointly with the SDLP’s John Hume – as a main architect of the Northern Ireland peace process, David Trimble (now Lord Lisnagarvey) of the UUP lost the notoriously bitter 2005 election contest to the former mayor of Craigavon borough.

Mr Simpson has a strong public service track record and all the Orange Order credentials seen by many unionists as essential for election, but his main UUP rival for the seat this time around, highly decorated military veteran Doug Beattie MC, has qualities admired by most unionists – and some nationalists.

Although Mr Beattie will be seen as too liberal and progressive for more traditional unionists to countenance, his support for same-sex marriage could attract cross-community votes from nationalists who believe a unionist election victory is inevitable.

If not this time around then in future polls, a single nationalist candidate benefiting from an fairly equal split in the unionist vote could take the seat. On this occasion, both of the unionists and Sinn Fein’s John O’Dowd are strong, high-profile candidates, while many have expressed surprise that the SDLP are fielding local councillor Declan McAlinden rather than party stalwart Dolores Kelly.

On the canvas trail, Mr Simpson says he has found people are more concerned with bread and butter issues than the possible introduction of same-sex marriage or relaxing the strict abortion laws (which are devolved matters).

“The issues that people are raising with me are education, the health issue and getting Stormont back up and running,” he said.

“I’m not saying there isn’t a lobby out there for those things but I’m just not getting it.”

The 58-year-old Gospel singer said his role on the Defra select committee at Westminster had prompted most of the questions.

“People are saying to me ‘where are we with air pollution, where are we with the single farm payment in agriculture and what is going to replace that [post-Brexit]?”

Mr Simpson said he has been given assurances that “Northern Ireland will not be the poor cousin when it comes to Brexit.”

“There are some concerns but I also believe that there are a host of opportunities in relation to finding new markets.”

Commenting on the need to move beyond the traditional sectarian divisions, Mr Simpson said he has a track record of representing all of his constituents.

“When I was a councillor I was the mayor of Craigavon. When former SDLP councillor Ignatius Fox was mayor I was deputy, and then the following year I was mayor and he was deputy. Both sides of the community made it very clear to me and him that it was the best partnership there had been in Craigavon for 25 years,” he said.

Ahead of the June 8 poll, Doug Beattie has made it clear he is prepared to risk alienating some unionists by speaking on out important social issues.

“I believe that we should allow same-sex marriage,” he said.

“I am not talking about forcing [same-sex] marriage on churches, I am talking about people getting married because they love each other. However, there are people out there who do not support same-sex marriage because of deeply held religious views and I will fight for their right to hold that point of view. I think it’s maybe time for a referendum in Northern Ireland on equal marriage.”

The former Royal Irish Regiment captain also supports a change in the abortion laws.

“I absolutely believe women must be trusted and given control of their own bodies. I am pro-life but I believe women need to have choice.”

Mr Beattie said he did not support the introduction of the GB 1967 Abortion Act, but said the law needs revised.

“Northern Ireland is not stopping abortion, we are exporting abortion. People who want to have an abortion will go to Britain but that is only for those who can afford it. What we are doing here is discriminating against the poor. I would support abortion for sex crimes such as rape, and also for fatal foetal abnormality.”

If elected, Mr Beattie said he would bring “higher profile representation” while building a more united constituency.

“What we really need is unionism that is confident, respectful and inclusive. We all have shared problems and I’d like to think I can unite people and focus on those shared problems at Westminster. The three main problems here at the minute are Brexit, the Union and the fact we don’t have an executive.”

Former print production manager Leslie White said it was more important than ever that Northern Ireland politicians “moved beyond the orange and green” mindset.

The 66-year-old from Craigavon, said whoever represents the constituency “must take on board what people are asking for” in relation to issues such as health provision and education.

“Too many people still think along orange and green lines and our politicians don’t seem to be committed to changing that, and I say that as someone from an orange background.”

Mr White added: “Lurgan is still split down the middle and so is Portadown, and the same could be said for other places where people don’t integrate enough. There has to be give and take on both sides and this country will never change until there is.”

Emma Wilson is a 20-year-old student from Craigavon.

She said the younger generation “doesn’t want old men setting the agenda for them,” but is confident things are slowly changing.

“Me and my friends want choice over our bodies for one thing, and we’re not hung up on the old religious battles from years ago. I have friends who are gay and it’s absurd that they can’t get married in the way we can.

“I’m not too worried about Brexit because it’s up to us as a country, in the UK, to make the best of whatever happens.”

Ms Wilson added: “I didn’t want Brexit myself but I hope the really anti-Brexit people don’t make things as bad as possible just so they can say ‘I told you so.’ That would be totally irresponsible.

“I come from a unionist background but I, and I think most of my friends too, would vote for the best candidate just on the issues that matter, like education, health and employment etc.”

Woman injured in petrol bombing at her home

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A woman sustained injuries to her legs after a petrol bomb was hurled at her east Belfast home.

Police received a report that a petrol bomb had been thrown at the Clara Street house around 11.35pm yesterday.

A PSNI spokesman said a female occupant who received injuries to her legs was taken to hospital for treatment to her injuries, which are not believed to be life threatening.

The house sustained smoke damage.

Detective Sergeant McPhillips has appealed to anyone who may have noticed any suspicious activity in the area to contact Detectives at Reactive and Organised Crime at Musgrave on the non-emergency number 101, quoting reference 1427 14/05/17. Alternatively, if someone would prefer to provide information without giving their details they can contact the independent charity Crimestoppers and speak to them anonymously on 0800 555 111.

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