Death by Committee

Joe McDonnell died 32 years ago today. If memory, with its seeming paradox of increasing unpredictability, is faithful I had a visit on the afternoon of his death with a friend whose brother had just been killed by the IRA after being labelled an informer. Having shot him they ended up beating him around the head for good measure before throwing him down a rubbish chute.

His family always refused to believe he had worked for the British and given the people in the IRA’s security department that were both working and killing for the British, the family certainly have grounds for grievance. But that is something the HET could never be expected to properly examine. In any event his sister never lost her republican conviction and I was immensely pleased to see her for the first time in over a year when then too she had visited me on the blanket with her son still only months old. Because of the regime of putrid squalor we then lived under in April 1980, the fear crossed my mind that I might transmit something to one so young.

Joe McDonnell was a boisterous character and according to all accounts very much one of the lads. I first met him the day after my release from Magilligan in 1975. A feud between the Official and Provisional IRAs was in full throttle at the time I was released so arrangements were made from within the prison to send me to a safe area, Lenadoon, where the local Provisional IRA put me up for the night and helped me consume as many pints as I could down on my first thirsty night out of prison. The following day before being sent to Ardoyne for a week, the volunteers I was with called on Joe at his home where we stayed for about an hour. Joe did a lot of the talking but little of it was about matters republican. He had other interests in life which helped make him the lively character cum rascal that made him so popular among friends and comrades. In spite of that it was always known if he set his mind to something it was a done deal. I only ever saw him once again; leaving the visits in Crumlin Road jail in January 1977 where he was nonchalantly dandering as if out for a stroll.

The fifth of ten republican hunger strikers to lose their lives he was the first of six hunger strikers to die after the protest had broken the resolve of the British prime minister, Margaret Thatcher. But that information was withheld from him. That he died was not primarily because Thatcher had the will to hold his gaze. She blinked and Joe McDonnell never did. He died because Danny Morrison of the ‘Committee for Prisoner Safety’ went into the prison hospital on the 5th of July 1981 with a vial of knowledge, the contents of which would have saved the lives of six dying men, but it never reached them. Morrison flushed it, and with it their lives, down the drain and has tried to keep knowledge of it there ever since. None have lied more about the hunger strikes than he. John Major once said of Normal Lamont ‘if he says it's Wednesday, people think it’s Thursday.’ As a name, Danny Lamont would not be out of place.

In terms of republican history the 5th of July 1981 is on a par with Ballyseedy. Morrison subsequently became a man of influence and for decades sought to influence and move activists away from the republican ideas and beliefs that sustained them during arduous times and towards the ideas the British had promoted throughout the republican armed campaign and prison struggles.

John Sergeant’s book Maggie, from where the anecdote on Major’s take on Lamont is drawn, doesn’t mention the hunger strike and gives surprisingly little coverage to the IRA, the organisation being mentioned on only two pages. Sinn Fein is referred to just once. What Sergeant does do is prick the balloon that has floated the myth of Thatcher’s Iron Lady image. This was not the hardnosed immutable ideologue depicted by the Tory faithful. She was a ruthless pragmatist who had the knack of shifting onto the shoulders of others responsibility for the many U turns that were made on her watch and with her approval.

She made a U turn on the hunger strike in the days before Joe McDonnell died. But the self-serving Tory myth of her unshakeable conviction and determination has been used for decades to sustain another myth, that she alone was responsible for the deaths of the ten hunger strikers. She played a big part in their deaths but she did not betray them. That dishonour belongs to the Committee men who sat on the banks of their own Vistula waiting for the moment that would be kind to them.

The moment was kind to them, history will not be.

12 comments:

  1. "History will not be" - I hope you are right Anthony. Brilliant article, been waiting on your thoughts on this and thanks for sharing and putting into words what many of us don't have the standing or the authority to say without being subject to abuse by the likes of those who would still defend this vile committee

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  2. Sean,

    thanks.

    Nothing stops the abuse from those who don't give a toss what happened to Joe or have not the slightest inclination to find out. Look at the abuse Richard got.

    'Vile committee' is right

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  3. Anthony,

    'She made a U turn on the hunger strike in the days before Joe McDonnell died.'

    I'm not so sure that the historical narrative in this regard will stand the test of time. Sir Robert Armstrong's memo, 13th April 1981, opens up the possibility that she bottled it for the optics, effectively appearing to lose in order to win.

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  4. Robert,

    the memo written 3 months before she made the U turn, would at best open up the possibility that she made it for tactical reasons.

    The body of evidence shows she made many U turns and masked them with the adage get the name of an early riser and you can sleep to noon

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  5. Robert,

    good to se you still around. Wondered where you had gone! Thought you might have been in Maghaberry for rioting during the flags protest!!!!!

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  6. Joe Mc Donnell along with those five other men,s deaths is now no longer conjecture but fact as proven by Richard O Rawe and backed up by agent Duddy,and unfortunately like the dup,s petition of concern yesterday in the Red Sky debacle, no matter how much evidence or how clearly the guilt is shown,fuck all will happen to the guilty ,much the pity .

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  7. 'In war there are no winners or losers, just survivors who live to talk about it.'

    Another regularly used cliche is 'a week is a long time in politics'. Well the last week in the O6C has only been a perfect summation of the futility of 40 years of struggle (which promised so much!), but more importantly it has also revealed what was it's primary driver, GREED.

    AM, yourself, R O'Rawe et al, in arguing your corner, must be commended in the way that you's have attempted to put your argument accross within the context of when the events happened. In dicussing the 'Struggle' these days far too many commentators tend to cherry pick events and put their own spin on them.

    Over the last week the political headlines can split be split between both camps as follows;
    On the 'Taig' side:
    1. Gerry Kelly being taken for a spin on the front of a Paddy Wagon,

    2. screens errected for contentious marches,

    3. Marty being awarded for his efforts for services to Lizzie & Partition with 'MLA of the Year' for keeping the good ship Stormont HQ afloat,

    4. HET not fit for purpose. The Sunday Politics debate between Kelly & Elliott was DOUBLE confirmation (following Allister's shallow vicotry on Ann's Bill) that we have are now at the stage where the 'victims' are mere political pawns.

    The Sunday World revealtions on the crisis within Republican dissent. How the POWs in MagHaberry sould be doing aith a committee on the outside NOW!

    6. PSNI/RUC siezing the Boston College tapes,


    On the 'Hun' side we have had;

    1. The Red Sky scandal and will Nelson stay or go? Well PEter wasn't forced to go so why should he!!

    2. A TV documentary on the Presbo Mutual fiasco;

    3. Yesterday's Stormont debate which detiorated into a slanging match on funding.

    In summation, 40+ years on the 'Taigs' are still no further on in achieving the 'Holy grail' of Irish Unity. Even after the sacrifices of the '10 Irish martyrs',hundreds of volunteers murdered, 1000's of deaths and as Gerry Kelly pointed out 100's of 1000's of hours in Prison.

    On the 'Hun' side the three points reveal not much has changed in their 'plantation' physce as underlined by yesterday's Stormont debate which descended into a slanging match between Robinson & Allister on party funding.

    Whilst Carson is reverred by the UPP it looks like the DUP should be erecting a statue up @ Stormont to addorn their own mentor, Gordon Grekko.

    In Norn Iron Lizzie maybe Queen, but Greed is definitely KING!!

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  8. Sorry for focusing on one part of your comment Fenian but I wouldn't pay much attention to anything that appears in the Sunday World, don't listen to everything Pauline and Bobby concoct to try and keep the pot stirring. And no matter what skews and divisions there may be between republicans on the outside ALL the POWs, of whatever hue, have people working very hard to raise money for their families and to make things as comfortable as possible in a very trying set of circumstances. I have seen this work firsthand and it should never be dismissed as though this disgusting committee could or would somehow do a better job for the POWs. At least these people are trying their best to make sure that prisoners and their dependents are looked after. That shouldn't be forgot about. What the prisoners really need is people to speak out on their behalf in civil society, we need more people, like what Angela Nelson is trying to do in West Belfast, to use their position or office to bring this issue to a wider audience. If I picked that up wrong fair enough but there was too much suggestion in that comment in relation to the prisoners and the work being done - or not being done as it came across to me - on their behalf. As for the Sunday World wouldn't even read that MI5 trash never mind actually take any of it on board

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  9. Sean,

    It wan't directed at individual groups and those working for prisoners.

    However, when I mentioned by outside committee, I feel there does need to be some concerted effort to relay to society the collective plight of the POWs and SHOW that there is some form of coherent unity. At the end of the day they see themselves as Irish Freedom fighters for the cause of Irish unity..The perception of dis-unity & infighting isn't helping!!

    I tried to compile a list of all POWs a while back and I hit nothing but brick walls. Some lsits on were more tahn 2 years old and I cldn't even get a total headcount of ALL the prisoners.

    So we can stick our heads in the sand and say that the Sunday World is MI5 etc etc.But that doesn't fix the public perception that there are issues on the wings etc. The shinners in their time used to put issues on the long finger with similar MI5/6 British brush offs! So this time around we should try not to make the same mistakes twice.

    Public perception is key to winning herats & minds, what the Sunday World & it's ilk say just further disuades people from getting involved with the plight of the prisoners..





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  10. p.s. To avoid confusion the line from my previous comment;

    'How the POWs in MagHaberry sould be doing aith a committee on the outside NOW!'

    should read;

    'How the POWs in MagHaberry could be doing with some form of a committee (for want of a better word!) on the outside NOW!'

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  11. Anthony,

    As always thank you. Consecutive domestic rather than constitutional crisis to blame for my absence. Some r&r in Maghaberry is somewhat attractive - what time is the next bus to Ardoyne?

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  12. Robert,

    hopefully you will get on top of whatever crises occur. Crisis is the enemy of peace of mind.

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