London ad campaign challenges May’s defence of army killings in North

‘Ad van’ will travel the city’s streets highlighting cases of a father and a boy shot by British army

12-year-old Kevin Heatley who was shot by the British army in 1973
12-year-old Kevin Heatley who was shot by the British army in 1973

A civil liberties group and relatives of people killed by British soldiers during the Troubles have launched a mobile advertising campaign in London challenging the British prime minister’s defence of the British army.

The Pat Finucane Centre said the campaign was launched on Tuesday in response to comments by Theresa May at the Conservative party conference in September where she complained about what she called ". . . activist, left-wing human rights lawyers [WHO]harangue and harass the bravest of the brave - the men and women of Britain's armed forces".

She also pledged to defend British soldiers against “vexatious allegations” made against them.

Christopher Quinn who was shot dead in disputed circumstances in November 1971
Christopher Quinn who was shot dead in disputed circumstances in November 1971

The Pat Finucane Centre (PFC) along with a number of Irish families are challenging that support for the British army by highlighting what they said were “the appalling way they were treated following the killings of their loved-ones by British soldiers”.

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From Tuesday until Saturday an advertising van is travelling around the streets of London focussing on the cases of Christopher Quinn, a father of five children, and 12-year-old Kevin Heatley, who were both shot dead by British soldiers

Mr Quinn (39) from west Belfast was shot dead in disputed circumstances in November 1971 as he carried out vigilante duty at a sectarian interface in the city.

Kevin Heatley was shot dead by a British soldier in Newry, Co Down, also in disputed circumstances, in February 1973. The British army claimed he was killed in cross-fire while it was also claimed that an army corporal deliberately targeted the child.

A soldier was convicted of unlawful killing, a judgment which was overturned on appeal. In November of the following year, the boy’s father, Desmond, who was suffering from depression since the killing, took his own life.

The PFC, citing declassified British Ministry of Defence (MoD) documents, said that “only £500 was paid to the Quinn family despite internal MoD advice that the case was valued at £10,000” while “the family of Kevin Heatley was offered a derisory £750 because this was ‘the acceptable rate for a minor’, according to the MoD”.

Paul O’Connor of the PFC said the two cases highlighted in the “Ad Van” campaign were “just the tip of the iceberg”.

“The MoD stands guilty of decades of racist and often illegal behaviour in response to wrong-doing by British soldiers. A culture of impunity still exists in respect of the actions of the British military in Iraq and Afghanistan,” said Mr O’Connor.

Gerry Moriarty

Gerry Moriarty

Gerry Moriarty is the former Northern editor of The Irish Times