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Ex-Sinn Fein member who spied for UK found dead |
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by Paul Hoskins Reuters Entered into the database on Tuesday, April 04th, 2006 @ 20:55:40 MST |
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A former member of Irish nationalist party Sinn Fein who spied for
Britain was found shot dead on Tuesday, just two days before a fresh bid by
London and Dublin to end Northern Ireland's political stalemate. Police in the Republic of Ireland confirmed they were investigating the discovery
of a man in his mid-50s in the northwestern county of Donegal. "The State Pathologist has been contacted and the scene is being preserved
pending the arrival of the Garda Technical Team," the police said in a
statement. They did not name the man but a police source confirmed local media reports
that it was Denis Donaldson who last year was expelled from Sinn Fein, which
wants to end British rule in Northern Ireland, after he admitted spying for
London. "I am satisfied that it is who it is reported to be," the source
said, adding that it was too early to say whether he had been killed or taken
his own life. The Irish government issued a statement describing it as a "brutal murder".
"The matter is now under investigation. We hope that whoever is responsible
for this callous act will be brought to justice as soon as possible." A spokesman for the Northern Ireland office said the British-ruled province's
secretary of state, Peter Hain, was "appalled by this barbaric act"
but declined to say if that meant he was treating the death as murder rather
than suicide. Donaldson was a convicted Irish Republican Army bomber who spent time in prison
with Gerry Adams, now leader of the guerrilla group's political ally Sinn Fein. Donaldson was again arrested in 2002 and accused of spying for Sinn Fein at
the Stormont parliament in Belfast but in a dramatic twist he was expelled from
the party in December after admitting he had been a mole for the British for
two decades. The IRA took the unusual step of issuing a brief statement: "The IRA had
no involvement whatsoever in the death of Denis Donaldson." The IRA called a ceasefire in 1997 and pledged last July to down arms. An independent
watchdog reported in October that the guerrilla group was keeping to its pledge. British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his Irish counterpart, Bertie Ahern,
are both expected in Northern Ireland this week to unveil their latest plan
to kick-start the province's mothballed assembly which collapsed in part due
to allegations that Donaldson and others had been spying for Sinn Fein. The Stormont assembly, in which Catholic Nationalist and pro-British Protestant
parties on either side of the Northern Ireland's sectarian divide shared power,
collapsed three years ago after a police raid on Sinn Fein offices. (Additional reporting by Michael Smith in Dublin and Adrian Croft in London) |