FRIEND
OF THE PEOPLE
The Murder of Rosemary Nelson
June
2000 Special Article by Robbie McVeigh
Rosemary Nelson and The Garvaghy Road
12 JUNE 2000
By: Robbie McVeigh
Rosemary Nelson was an ordinary lawyer serving all sides of the community. We
hear this constantly and it is, in part, true. But she was also an extraordinary
lawyer. This was most obvious in her relationship with the people of the
Garvaghy Road. She was competent and professional in her defence of human
rights, in her belief that the law and the police should work for people rather
than against them. But she was also emotionally committed to the cause of
justice - it was not something than she did between 9 am and 5pm and then left
behind. She cared deeply and passionately about the rights of her clients. She
didn't have to stay out night after night on the Garvaghy Road when the area was
under siege. She didn't have to run the gauntlet of racist, sexist and sectarian
abuse she received for her work. She didn't have to travel with the Garvaghy
Road Residents Coalition to meet with Tony Blair. She didn't have to sit through
endless sessions with the Parades Commission. But she did all these things.
Despite the belief of some legal professionals who insist that all lawyers
should be dispassionate and neutral, this did not make her a bad lawyer - it
made her a great lawyer.
One of the more illuminating events I attended in the work of the Rosemary
Nelson Campaign was an event that brought together the great and the good from
the fields of law and politics. These people were all effusive in their tributes
to Rosemary. They had, however, also insisted that the local Friends of Garvaghy
Road would not be allowed to publicise a forthcoming event - since, presumably,
this would lower the tone of the evening. The only solace in this was the
thought of what Rosemary would have made of it. She had been elevated -
posthumously of course - into the halls of the great and the good. But her
clients, those she had fought for as a remarkably committed human rights
defender, were still outside the door.
Rosemary's murder was an attack upon human rights and equality and justice. It
impacted most brutally and cruelly, of course, on her family - her children, her
husband, her mother and father, her brothers and sisters. It impacted on the
entire human rights community around the world. It also impacted deeply on the
Catholic/Nationalist community across the north of Ireland. But it had a very
specific impact on the people of the Garvaghy Road. In the most brutal manner,
it reminded that community of its vulnerability. It took away one of its most
able defenders; it removed 'the voice of the voiceless'. We all have to keep
struggling for justice because that is what Rosemary herself would have done. We
also have to reflect and accept, however, that she cannot be replaced - because
she was irreplaceable. This truth is more evident on the Garvaghy Road than
anywhere else - there she was not just a lawyer but also a counsellor and a
friend.
I had the privilege of attending the planting of trees in memory of Rosemary in
the Bunscoil on the Garvaghy Road in April 2000. Paul Nelson and the children of
the Bunscoil led the ceremony. There could be no more appropriate way to
remember Rosemary. She loved the Irish language with the same passion that she
brought to all aspects of her life. She had done much work to support the school
in its early days. It also seemed more appropriate to have this living, growing
tribute to her rather than a more conventional artefact. It made tangible the
notion that 'our revenge is the laughter of our children'. It also made real and
physical the link between Rosemary and the people of the Garvaghy Road. Her
brutal murder had already ensured that the spirit of Rosemary Nelson and of the
Garvaghy Road would always be intertwined. They are now locked together into the
story of the struggle for human rights and equality in Portadown - a story that
is both tragic and inspiring. There will be no justice for Rosemary Nelson
without justice for the people of the Garvaghy Road; there will be no justice
for the people of Garvaghy Road without justice for Rosemary Nelson.
Please read and pass on the Pat Finucane Centre's in-depth
report and chronology of the assassination:
Rosemary
Nelson: the life and death of a human rights defender
The
Rosemary Nelson Campaign
Following are articles about the murder of Rosemary Nelson,
the worsening situation on the Garvaghy Road, and the continued calls for an
independent international inquiry into her execution.
Note
from the GRRC Following Rosemary Nelson's Murder
Orange mask slips to reveal the fascist hate within
- Sunday Business Post, 21 March 1999
Rosemary Nelson - 'The Voice of the People' - Sunday
Business Post, 21 March 1999
'They don't like it when the Irish rise up' -
Sunday Tribune, 21 March 1999
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