Human rights group ‘sabotaged’ justice campaign

Human Rights


Justice Watch Ireland (JWI), founded by Dennis McFadden (pictured, inset) in 2013, is now
understood to have been a ruse to spy on and sabotage republican and
human rights activism.

McFadden, who was active in both Sinn Féin and Saoradh, encouraged
former IRA prisoners, the Guildford Four’s Gerry Conlon and others to
become directors and/or guarantors for the organisation.

It is thought that details of their conversations, movements and legal
efforts were reported directly back to MI5 by McFadden. He is also
accused of subverting campaigns like that for the release of the
Craigavon 2, two Armagh men imprisoned for 18 and 25 years as a result
of a miscarriage of justice.

A republican ex-prisoner and former Sinn Féin councillor, Angela Nelson,
who was convinced to become a director of JWI, told the Sunday Life
newspaper: “With hindsight one can look back at a lot of things and
deduce that was exactly what was happening at that time — that McFadden
set up Justice Watch Ireland to infiltrate and sabotage republican
justice campaigns for MI5.”

The Glasgow-born spy and his reputed wife, another former director of
the bogus organisation, are now in hiding after McFadden was named as a
spy in 2020.

Justice Watch Ireland was established as a limited company but it is
believed that MI5 planned for it to become a registered charity supplied
by public funding.

While maintaining a cover of respectability, McFadden’s apparent
interest lay in attempts by human rights activists to overturn the
convictions of Brendan McConville and John Paul Wootton, known as the
Craigavon Two, who were falsely convicted of a 2009 Continuity IRA
attack.

The campaign was prominently supported by Gerry Conlon, who served 15
years before being released after his false convictions for IRA
involvement were overturned.

Ms Nelson recalled how McFadden blocked attempts by her to go on a
12-month speaking tour of Ireland to highlight the Craigavon Two
campaign.

McFadden also refused to hand over passwords for key social media
accounts and prevented efforts to reach out to Irish America for
support, she said.

“He was there during meetings for the Justice for the Craigavon Two
campaigns, structures and strategies.

“He was obviously going back to his handlers and telling them where we
were coming from, what we had gathered up, who we were approaching,
writing to, meeting with and what their answers were.

“At that stage I was meeting every political party — Sinn Féin, SDLP,
People Before Profit, the whole lot of them, asking for their support
for the campaign.”

Siobhan McConville, wife of Brendan, said the report “confirms the
infiltration of MI5 and the sabotage of the Craigavon two campaign. The
campaign continues and will do so until this wrongful conviction is
overturned.”





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