Sep 28, 2009
Irish News: Provos ‘kept rivals in dark’
Provos ‘kept rivals in dark’
Families of the strikers are divided over O’Rawe claim
By Seamus McKinney
28/09/09
TONY O’Hara last saw his brother Patsy alive two days before the Derry man died on the 61st day of his hunger strike on May 21 1981.
At the time O’Hara was an INLA prisoner at the Maze serving a sentence for possession of arms.
He died on the same day as IRA hunger striker Raymond McCreesh from Camlough, Co Armagh.
“For the entire duration of the 61 days I got to spend two hours and 15 minutes with Patsy. Even though I was in jail I was brought in handcuffs from H5 to the prison hospital – a short trip,” Mr O’Hara said.
Two days after seeing his brother Mr O’Hara, whose first cell mate was Bobby Sands, heard of his younger brother’s death on a crystal radio set smuggled into the jail.
“Another prisoner came to his window and shouted but I sort of knew. I was waiting for it when news came,” he said.
Mr O’Hara was given 12 hours compassionate parole to attend his brother’s funeral and just two months later he was released.
“When Patsy died I just felt numb. I remembered what it was like when Bobby Sands died,” he said.
“On the night he was elected there was elation. We just, everyone just, celebrated and cheered.
“But on the night he died there was just silence. The whole of Long Kesh went silent.”
Although any deal, real or not, would not have saved O’Hara’s life, the INLA man’s family is one of those demanding an inquiry into the Provisionals’ management of the Hunger Strike.
Mr O’Hara’s concern is that the Sinn Fein version of events has changed too often since Richard O’Rawe published his account of a possible deal in 2005.
He is also concerned that the INLA leadership was never told of the possible deal despite the fact that two of its members – Kevin Lynch and Michael Devine – died after it was alleged to have been made.
“It could have been a propaganda coup for the blanketmen and we could have said the Brits reneged on a deal,” Mr O’Hara said.
He believes the Provos tried to manipulate the Hunger Strike to exclude the INLA as much as possible.
“Patsy was to be the second to go on strike after Bobby Sands but Francie Hughes created such a rumpus that he went second,” Mr O’Hara said.
He accepts there could be a number of reasons for the Sinn Fein leadership deciding not to accept the deal.
“There is a lot of speculation and I don’t know the reason but that is one of the big questions that must be asked,” Mr O’Hara said.
He disputes the various statements put forward by the Sinn Fein leadership in recent months, not least a claim that all prisoners were told of the deal in 1981.
Mr O’Hara is adamant that only a full inquiry, chaired by an international human rights figure, will get to the truth.
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