15/08/2001

Colombians begin questioning IRA suspects

Colombian authorities have begun interviewing three IRA suspects arrested in Bogotá last Saturday on charges of training Marxist rebels.

The Colombian army have said they have strong evidence as part of their prosecution including secret film against the trio, Martin McCauley, James Monaghan and Niall Connolly.

It has been alleged the men were training local Marxist rebels in explosives and terrorist tactics.

Colombian Defence Minister Senor Gustavo Bell told a news conference the three were arrested in Bogotá on Saturday after spending five weeks training members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC).

The men are charged of training members of the guerrilla group Farc in bomb making and allegedly carrying false passports. If convicted they could face maximum prison terms of 15-20 years.

Garda sources have indicated that all the men are believed to be members of the IRA. Further affirmation of the men’s past came from Colombian Commander-General Jorge Enrique Mora who told the BBC: “It has been confirmed to us by the authorities in Northern Ireland that they are the IRA. They belong to the engineering department of the IRA – those who make the bombs, the explosives and the custom-made weapons”.

It has now emerged that two of the men arrested had held senior positions within Sinn Féin. Photographs have come to light, which show Danny Morrison and James Monaghan at a Sinn Féin ard fheis in 1989.

However, Alex Maskey of Sinn Féin has denied that any of the three men arrested in Colombia were members of his party.

He said on Wednesday one of the three, James Monaghan had been a member of the party’s executive, but had left in 1989 or 1990. He also said Martin McCauley had been an election worker in Lurgan in 1996 but had never been a member of Sinn Féin. Mr Maskey said Sinn Féin before had never heard of the third man, Niall Connolly.

Unionists have reacted angrily to the Columbian arrests claiming it provided further proof that the IRA cessation of violence was not permanent but merely a tactical ploy to squeeze concessions out of the British government. (AMcE)

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