UK Implementing Statute of Limitations for Those Involved in Northern Ireland 'Troubles'

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The U.K. government plans to implement a statute of limitations for those allegedly involved in committing violence in Northern Ireland during the "Troubles," the Associated Press reported.

The "Troubles" refers to three decades of deadly conflict between U.K. soldiers and Irish republican and British loyalist forces when over 3,500 people died. The mass violence ended in 1998 with the Good Friday peace accord. The statute of limitations will be introduced by the U.K. government to end prosecutions for alleged crimes committed by those on all sides of the conflict.

"We know that the prospect of the end of criminal prosecutions will be difficult for some to accept, and this is not a position we take lightly," Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis told lawmakers in the House of Commons.

However, he said the move would be "the best way to help Northern Ireland move further along the road to reconciliation."

The leader of Northern Ireland's Democratic Unionist Party, Jeffrey Donaldson, denounced the plan, saying, "We understand that with the passage of time the prospect of justice is diminishing for many, but these proposals, if passed, will extinguish that flickering flame of justice completely and is a moral overreach that cannot be accepted."

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Brandon Lewis
The U.K. plans to implement a statute of limitations for those allegedly involved in the Northern Ireland "Troubles." Above, British Prime Minister Boris Johnson (center) greets troops with Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis (right) and... Peter Morrison/WPA Pool/Getty Images

Lewis told lawmakers the statute would "apply equally to all Troubles-related incidents." He said the change reflected the increasing difficulty of prosecuting people for long-ago crimes.

Most deaths during the "Troubles" were civilians.

"But we've come to the view that this is the best and only way to facilitate an effective information retrieval and provision process," Lewis said.

"It is, in reality, a painful recognition of the very reality of where we are," he added.

The statute of limitations will be accompanied by a new independent body tasked with uncovering and compiling information about Troubles-related deaths and injuries, according to Lewis.

As part of the 1998 peace process, many militants were released from prison or were not prosecuted for actions during the Troubles.

The U.K.'s Conservative government is under pressure from many party members and the military to lift the threat of prosecution from troops who served in Northern Ireland decades ago. Several prosecutions of former soldiers for alleged Troubles crimes have recently collapsed.

Earlier this month, authorities announced plans to halt the prosecution of two former British soldiers over the killing of three people in Northern Ireland in 1972, including two shot dead on "Bloody Sunday," when paratroopers killed 13 Catholic civilians in the city of Londonderry.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the statute of limitations would stop army veterans facing "vexatious prosecutions well into their 70s and 80s."

He told lawmakers that the plan would "enable the province of Northern Ireland to draw a line under the Troubles, to enable the people of Northern Ireland to move forward."

Putting a time limit on prosecutions will also mean the perpetrators of some paramilitary attacks could escape justice.

The opposition Labour Party called the statute of limitations "an amnesty in all but name" for murder.

Donaldson said "victims will see these proposals as perpetrator-focused rather than victim-focused and an insult to both the memory of those innocent victims who lost their lives during our Troubles and their families."

Britain's Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis
The U.K. plans to implement a statute of limitations for those allegedly involved in the Northern Ireland "Troubles." Above, Britain's Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis walks to 10 Downing Street in London on April 27,... Matt Dunham/AP Photo

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