Report finds council "not pressurised" to give Bobby Storey cremation special treatment

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Bobby Storey's funeral on 30th June 2020

By Q Radio News/PA News

An independent report into Belfast City Council's invovlement in republican Bobby Storey's cremation - has found no evidence of a republican takeover - of Roselawn Crematorium. 

The probe conducted by barrister Peter Coll QC was published this afternoon. 

It focused on Belfast City Council’s handling of events at Roselawn.

However while the report rejected claims of a republican “takeover” of Roselawn Cemetery, it found differential treatment in arrangements for the cremations that day were “avoidable, unnecessary and completely wrong”.

The council has apologised to all the families who were affected by events at the cemetery on June 30 2020, and described the differential treatment as “unacceptable”.

Peter Coll QC rejected the allegation that pressure was put on council officials. He said: “It appears to me that the evidence does not establish that the determining factor for the difference in treatment was Mr Storey’s status as a former senior member of Sinn Fein per se, nor that in some way Sinn Fein had applied pressure to have the change regarding committal services brought about."

The report makes a number of recommendations, including improvements to the CCTV coverage at Roselawn Cemetery, a review of the appropriateness of the relative ease of potential access to the site and whether further security measures are required and potential restructuring within the Department of City and Neighbourhood Services.

It also said the council should consider a review of the structure of internal communications between councillors and senior officials, and carefully consider how it might respond in terms of crisis management to any future controversy.

In a statement the council said the findings and recommendations of the report are being considered.

“We will act swiftly to ensure that a repeat of such a situation occurring is avoided, and, that no other family would experience the hurt and pain of the families affected,” it said.

The funeral of the high profile republican and former IRA leader has been one of the most controversial events to occur during the coronavirus pandemic in Northern Ireland.

More than a thousand people lined the streets of west Belfast for Mr Storey’s funeral procession last June at a time when strict limitations on such events were in place.

The attendance of Sinn Fein leaders at the funeral and a subsequent memorial event at nearby Milltown cemetery sparked a major political row at Stormont, with the republican party accused of disregarding rules they set for the rest of society.

Mr Storey was not buried at Milltown and instead cremated at Roselawn cemetery on the other side of Belfast in a separate event that generated its own controversy.

The council apologised last year when it emerged that it granted access to mourners attending Mr Storey’s service on the same day that eight other families were denied access due to pandemic measures.

With a number of staff having been sent home from work early, prior to the start of the service, the council also faced claims it had effectively handed control of the venue over to republicans organising Mr Storey’s funeral.

Mr Coll was commissioned to investigate those claims as part of a probe that also focused on whether political representatives or anyone else acting on behalf of the Storey family sought and secured preferential treatment.

The investigation was initially expected to take six weeks but it ultimately took six months to report.

The families affected by the Roselawn events were informed of the findings on Thursday morning prior to the report being made public.

At today's coronavirus press briefing, First Minister Arlene Foster was asked about the Bobby Storey funeral report. Although acknowledging she hadn't read it yet, Ms Foster said: "“I am reminded that there were eight families who were not afforded at that particular point in time the same treatment as the Storey family by Belfast City Council and at Roselawn and no report of any nature is going to take away the hurt and the pain that those families felt when they found out that they had been treated differently because, of course, the rules are there for everyone and I think the hurt was that those families had been treated differently and so my thoughts are with them today.”"

Similarly, Conor Murphy also commented on the report at today's press briefing: “I also recognise that there were other families that used that service and that cemetery that day and they have had trauma added to their pain, including the Storey family themselves, because this is a saga that has rolled on and been much commented on and speculated on and reported on over that period of time and that adds to the grief that families are already facing."

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