Prominent Ulster Unionist Lord Kilclooney said today responsibility for security in Northern Ireland was "slipping away" from Belfast to Westminster at the time of Bloody Sunday.
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The peer, UUP MP Mr John Taylor, was telling the Saville Inquiry about his role as a minister in the old Northern Ireland government in the run-up to the January 1972 atrocity when British soldiers shot dead 13 unarmed civilians in Derry.
As a junior Home Affairs Minister Lord Kilclooney sat on the Joint Security Committee (JSC) alongside the North’s Prime Minister, Mr Brian Faulkner, and top-ranking police and military personnel.
But in his statement to the tribunal the former UUP deputy leader said a meeting of the JSC three days before the shootings had reinforced his concerns. "Power was slipping away to London," he said.
The army was supposed to provide support to police, but in his evidence on day 196 of the inquiry Lord Kilclooney claimed military chiefs may have withheld vital security information.
He said: "As a minister, I often felt that I was not getting the full story from the army, and there were times when I suspected that the army were not giving the RUC the full picture".
PA