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Title: Killing Finucane

Author: Justin O`Brien
Description: Subtitle: Murder in Defence of the Realm

Pat Finucanes murder in 1989 was the most infamous incident in the long story of British counter-insurgency in Northern Ireland. But it was in no way unique. In Killing Finucane, Justin OBrien tells the full story of collusion between loyalist paramilitaries and agents of the state – especially the RUC Special Branch and sinister elements in the British Army. The result was the corruption of the state itself and the loss of its claim to moral precedence in the fight against republican terrorism.

Killing Finucane tells the story of Northern Irelands dirty war from the start of the Troubles and through the 1980s and 90s. It tells of how Special Branch corrupted the RUC, stymied the Finucane murder hunt while recruiting his killer as an agent, and perverted the course of justice by lying to the Stevens inquiry. These abuses were official government policy: OBrien demonstrates that MI5 controlled the entire security environment, including Special Branch, and covered its tracks by a deliberate policy of scapegoating alleged rogue operators.

In exposing the reality behind the dirty war in Northern Ireland, Killing Finucane serves as a warning about the corrupting tendencies of an unaccountable security apparatus. It tells of how agents involved in the killing were protected rather than prosecuted, and reveals why this was allowed to happen.

This is an explosive and important exposé.

Author Biography

Justin OBrien is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Law, Queens University, Belfast. A former editor, current affairs at UTV, he is the author of two previous books on Irish politics, The Arms Trial and The Modern Prince, a biography of Charles Haughey. A specialist in the politics of corruption, he has also written about capital markets malfeasance in Wall Street on Trial.

288pp

Subtopic: Conflict Resolution
Year: 2005
Code: 4043
Price: €14.99

 

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