Sinn Féin feels arrest has primed party for elections

Hundreds of supporters give Gerry Adams rapturous applause at Belfast campaign rally

The Sinn Féin leader Gerry Adams was accorded a rapturous reception when he addressed a rally in west Belfast tonight demonstrating that the party feels that his arrest has primed republicans for the European and local elections in the North and South.

About 800 people crowded into the Devenish complex in west Belfast for the election rally which doubled as reception for Mr Adams after his period in detention in Antrim police station being questioned in connection with the 1972 murder of Jean McConville .

With Sinn Féin Northern Ireland chairman Bobby Storey as master of ceremonies the party’s Assembly members and MPs were invited onto the stage. Shortly thereafter, and with considerable fanfare, the North’s European candidate Martina Anderson, TD Mary Lou McDonald, Martin McGuinness and Mr Adams were also welcomed to the platform.

The Sinn Féin president was accorded a loud and long standing ovation. Party activists before and after the rally expressed confidence that the arrest of Mr Adams “had put a rocket under the Sinn Féin European and local election campaign” on both sides of the Border.

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Rather than majoring on his four nights and five days being questioned at Antrim police station Mr Adams in his address concentrated on galvanising Sinn Féin supporters for the election campaigns. He said however that “the sham I was put through” at Antrim station “in terms of the failure to present any evidential link between me and that awful event” (Ms McConville’s murder) sent the wrong signals about policing to the public.

He said that Sinn Féin would not be diverted from “the job of building the peace”. He said Sinn Féin also had a responsibility “to bring genuine civil policing that will respect every man, woman and child”.

Referring to today’s anniversary of the death of hunger striker Bobby Sands, he said that his “four days (in custody) is no big deal in the scheme of things”.

Mr Adams said that Sinn Féin was resolved to work with families who had suffered in the Troubles and to be “very, very sensitive that the McConville family suffered grievously”. He again called for the creation of an international independent truth and recovery process to deal with the past.

He said that in the election campaign Sinn Féin would be subjected to a “tsunami of abuse”. He cited Independent Newspapers as being particularly hostile to Sinn Féin.

Mr Adams was also critical of unionism. “We see equality as a right. They see equality as a threat, particularly unionist leaders in this part of the world,” he added.

Mr Adams said it was wrong for opponents to depict Sinn Féin as anti-European when Irish republicanism was derived from a European philosophy.

Ms Anderson, Sinn Féin’s only MEP, said it was up to republicans to elect four party MEPs in Ireland, North and South, and then “watch the establishment squirm”.

Ahead of the rally, Sinn Féin reported that the PSNI yesterday warned Mr Adams and Mr Storey of a threat to their lives. The party’s justice spokesman Raymond McCartney said that police called to the west Belfast homes of Mr Adams and Mr Storey “to make them aware of death threats from criminal elements”.

Meanwhile DUP First Minister Peter Robinson said that he plans to meet Ms McConville’s son in the coming days to discuss could he help him and the wider McConville family. “Whilst Gerry Adams and Sinn Fein have been playing the victim, it is important to remember that the real victims are the McConville family. Ten children were left orphaned and have never received justice. This was a horrific and brutal crime,” he said.

Gerry Moriarty

Gerry Moriarty

Gerry Moriarty is the former Northern editor of The Irish Times