Guildford Four’s Gerry Conlon dies in Belfast
Belfast man spent 15 years in jail in Britain for a crime he did not commit
Like many of my readers I am so glad the troubles in Northern Ireland have been resolved with SOME degree of success, Lord knows the whole history of it has been horrible, with nobody coming out of it without a lot on their consciences.
TO SEE VIDEOS ETC/:
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/ireland/irish-news/guildford-four-s-gerry-conlon-dies-in-belfast-1.1841247
Gerry Conlon, who spent 15 years in jail for a crime he did not commit, has died in Belfast at the age of 60.
Mr
Conlon was jailed for life in 1975 for the bombing of two pubs in
Guildford on October 5th, 1974 in which seven people were killed and
scores injured. He had emigrated to London in 1974 and was arrested six
weeks after the bombing.
Gerry Conlon was jailed along with the three other members of the Guildford Four, Paul Hill, Carole Richardson and Paddy Armstrong, in October 1975 for the Guildford bombings.
Video: Gerry Conlon released from prison
Mr Conlon’s father Giuseppe was
part of the Maguire Seven, and was jailed for 12 years in 1976. The
Maguire Seven, Annie Maguire, her husband Patrick and other members of
her family, including her brother-in-law Giuseppe Conlon, were convicted
of running a bomb factory in Kilburn. They were acquitted in 1991.
Their jailing was one of the biggest miscarriages of justice in British history along with the Birmingham Six.
Mr Conlon’s ordeal inspired the Jim Sheridan film In the Name of the Father which was a box office success in the 1990s, and starred Daniel Day-Lewis as Mr Conlon.
In
October 1989 the Court of Appeal quashed the sentences of the Guildford
Four after doubts were raised about the police evidence and they were
set free. An investigation by Avon and Somerset Police found serious
flaws in the way Surrey Police handled the case. As he emerged free from
the Court of Appeal, Gerry Conlon declared: “I have been in prison for
something I did not do. I am totally innocent.”
The Guilford Four received an apology from British prime minister Tony Blair in 2005.
In
March, Mr Conlon gave an interview to RTÉ’s Miriam Meets programme in
which he stated that every day of his torture and imprisonment was
“indelibly stamped on my brain”.
“At the least drop of a hat, memories come flooding back,” he said.
He
accused the British government of doing nothing to help him or the
victims of miscarriages of justice after they left jail. He also said he
feels guilty to this day that his father ended up in jail as a result
of his wrongful conviction.
In an article in The
Guardian five years ago, he wrote about his prison ordeal: “Not only did
we have to beat the criminal justice system but we also had to survive
in prison. Our reality was that nightmare.
“They
would urinate in our food, defecate in it, put glass in it. Our cell
doors would be left open for us to be beaten and they would come in with
batteries in socks to beat us over the head. I saw two people murdered.
I saw suicides. I saw somebody set fire to himself in Long Lartin
prison.”
He said it was 13 years after he was
incarcerated that the Irish Government got involved and that was only
after the British media had raised the possibility of a miscarriage of
justice.
Mr Conlon revealed that he had been in
therapy for seven years with a trauma psychiatrist. “For the first few
years, all I did was cry. I wanted to kill myself, the trauma was so
deep,” he said.
He said being a prison was a form
of “suspended animation” where you do not mature as a normal adult. For
years, he said, he felt disenfranchised from his family.
However, he said the last year of his life had been the best and the therapy he had undergone had finally helped him to cope.
Giuseppe
Conlon was jailed in 1976 for a related alleged bomb-making offence
when he travelled to England to arrange a legal defence for his son. He
had one lung, emphysema and had just undergone chemotherapy. He died in
Hammersmith Hospital in 1980 just four years into his sentence. Eleven
years later, his conviction was also overturned.
Sixteen
years after the Guildford Four’s release, Mr Blair said sorry for the
miscarriage of justice in a television recording from his office. “”I am
very sorry that they were subject to such an ordeal and injustice ...
That is why I am making this apology today - they deserve to be
completely and publicly exonerated,” he told the House of Commons in
2005.
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