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Families Acting for Innocent Relatives

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Families Acting for Innocent Relatives (FAIR) is a group founded in 1998 by unionist victims of the Troubles in South Armagh, who claim to feel marginalised by their perception that too many concessions were granted to Irish Republicans during the peace process, as well as by the inclusion of the Sinn Féin party (regarded by them as the political wing of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA)) members in the government of Northern Ireland, under the terms of the Belfast Agreement of 1998.[citation needed]

History

FAIR claims to represent the Unionist and Protestant victims of Irish Republican terrorism in South Armagh, Northern Ireland.

FAIR is led by South Armagh man Willie Frazer who lost five members of his close family to IRA violence during [[The Troubles. [1][verification needed] It is the largest such group in Northern Ireland, with approximately 600 members[citation needed]. FAIR is determined to place "innocent" loyalist/unionist victims' rights and issues high on the British government's agenda, and support the exclusion of Sinn Féin from the government of Northern Ireland. [citation needed]

FAIR has called for full public inquiries into alleged collusion between Irish authorities and Republicans in the deaths of Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) officers, Loyalist terrorists, and Northern Protestant civilians [1]. Representatives have met with the Smithwick Tribunal for this reason.

Controversies

A criticism of FAIR is that it only represents the victims of republican violence, downplaying and ignoring the numerous civilian victims of Loyalist terrorists and British security forces. Willie Frazer has defended his group's record by saying it is for South Armagh victims. He argues that the majority of the victims in South Armagh were caused by the IRA. However, Fair has included as a victim of IRA violence, Robert McConnell, alleged to be a member of both the Ulster Defence Regiment and of the illegal Ulster Volunteer Force[citation needed]. McConnell was implicated in the killing of the brothers of Eugene Reavey on January 4 1976, and in the Dublin and Monaghan bombings of 1974.[citation needed]

FAIR has been criticised for promoting Ian Paisley's allegation in 1999 that Eugene Reavey was involved in the killing of ten Protestant civilians at Kingsmill, the Kingsmill massacre, on January 5 1976. [2][citation needed] FAIR has refused to accede to Police Service of Northern Ireland demands that the allegation be removed. The then RUC Chief Constable, Ronnie Flanagan, dismissed the allegation against Reavey. In January 2007 the PSNI Historical Enquiries Team (HET) apologised to Reavey for the promotion of the allegation by elements within the RUC, and who had passed the false information to Ian Paisley in 1999. [3]

Susan McKay, the author of Northern Protestants, an Unsettled People, has said of the organisation: "Fair, Frazer admitted to a House of Commons select committee hearing... is controversial. "We are seen as the bad boys within the victims sector," he said. This is largely because of its aggressive insistence that there are "innocent" and "genuine" and "real" victims, and there are others who have no right to call themselves victims at all. According to Fair and the DUP, Eugene Reavey is in the latter category. It is an appalling lie." [4]


References

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