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Ken Kerr

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kenneth Kerr
Member of Derry City Council
In office
17 May 1989 – 19 May 1993
Preceded byAnnette Hamilton
Succeeded byBill Irwin
ConstituencyWaterside
Personal details
BornDerry, Northern Ireland
Political partyUlster Democratic Party (until 1994)
Other political
affiliations
Ulster Independence Movement (1996)

Kenneth Jason Kerr is a Northern Irish loyalist activist. He was a leading figure within the Ulster Defence Association (UDA) and its political wing, the Ulster Loyalist Democratic Party. He was also central to a series of allegations regarding collusion between the British security forces and loyalist paramilitaries.

Ulster Defence Association

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In his youth, Kerr served in the British Army before joining the UDA.[1] He served as Brigadier of the UDA's "Londonderry and North Antrim Brigade", and as such was a member of the movement's Inner Council.[2] In this role he succeeded Andy Robinson, who fled his position in 1986.[3][4] Like South Belfast brigadier John McMichael, Kerr also became involved in the UDA's political arm, the Ulster Loyalist Democratic Party, and following the killing of McMichael in 1987, Kerr served for a time as chairman of the party.[2] This role was soon filled on a more permanent basis by Ray Smallwoods.[2]

Ulster Democratic Party

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In 1989, the Ulster Loyalist Democratic Party contested the local elections and, despite a very low-key campaign, Kerr was elected as their sole representative in Northern Ireland.[5] He was elected to Derry City Council, representing the loyalist Waterside area.[6] He lost the seat at the 1993 election.[7] Kerr's win was however something of aberration as the success of the Ulster Democratic Party (UDP), as they became known in 1989, was otherwise limited to Belfast and its satellite towns of Lisburn and Newtownabbey.[8]

In early 1992, Kerr was attacked by the Provisional IRA (IRA) although he escaped serious injury. In response, Kerr accused local Democratic Unionist Party (DUP) activist David Nicholl of conspiring with the republicans to have him killed after Nicholl had published information linking the UDP to the UDA.[9] The link between the two groups would later be publicly acknowledged by the UDP. Later that same year, Kerr was profiled in an episode of the ITV current affairs programme This Week. During the programme Kerr stated that he was no longer a member of the UDA but remained a loyalist before denouncing the IRA as the "scum of the earth" and calling on the British government to seek them out and destroy them.[10]

In 1993, Kerr travelled with UDP chairman Ray Smallwoods to South Africa where they held a meeting with representatives of the Inkatha Freedom Party.[11] Kerr was close to Smallwoods and when the latter was killed in 1994, Kerr reacted angrily, stating "if I called for no retaliation, as sure as night turns to day, there is somebody who is going to retaliate and no matter what I say nothing will change that".[12]

Ulster Independence Movement

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Kerr subsequently left the UDP and joined the Ulster nationalist Ulster Independence Movement. He was on their candidate list for the 1996 elections to the Northern Ireland Forum, and also stood in Foyle, but was not elected to the body (nor indeed were any members of the party).[13]

The Committee

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According to Sean McPhilemy a series of loyalist killings carried out largely by Ulster Volunteer Force members Robin Jackson and Billy Wright and their underlings in the UVF Mid-Ulster Brigade were ordered by the Ulster Loyalist Central Co-ordinating Committee, a group he says was made up of a number of leading figures from Northern Irish society and public life. Kerr was, according to McPhilemy, a self declared member of this body although McPhilemy would later dismiss much of what Kerr said about his time on the committee as lies.[14]

Kerr and McPhilemy met in April 1996 at the Waterfoot Hotel in Kerr's native Derry, where Kerr admitted his membership of the committee, although a follow-up meeting was abandoned after Kerr stated that a Royal Ulster Constabulary (RUC) spy was present in the bar.[15] Kerr and his wife then spent a weekend with McPhilemy in Maidstone in August 1996. Kerr told McPhilemy that he had been a paid informer for British Military Intelligence for a number of years and that they had supplied a number of the names to be killed, with Kerr presenting them to the Committee at the behest of his paymasters.[16] Kerr named fifteen Catholics murdered between 1989 and 1991, all of whom he claimed had been killed on the committee's orders.[17] He also gave the names of around thirty supposed Committee members, all unknown to McPhilemy, and including twelve senior RUC officers.[18] Kerr initially suggested that he was volunteering the information as he wanted out of his role as an informant but at a later date claimed to be dying of colon cancer and wanted to unburden himself before death.[19]

In May 1997 Tim Laxton, acting on behalf of McPhilemy, paid Kerr £5,000 for a cassette tape that the UDA Brigadier claimed contained a recording of a meeting of the Committee in 1989. The tape, which was of poor quality and supposedly in code (a translation of which Kerr provided), was said by Kerr to contain the voices of RUC Assistant Chief Constable Trevor Forbes, "Chief Inspector Ezzard Boyd" and two unnamed businessmen discussing plans to murder Pat Finucane.[20] Uncertain of the veracity of the tape, McPhilemy began to doubt it when he realised that the name and nickname given by Kerr for one of the businessmen were the same as those of a Northern Ireland footballer whilst after watching videos of Forbes speaking he realised that his voice resembled none of those on the tape.[21] It subsequently came to light that Ezzard Boyd had in fact been a loyalist who served a prison sentence in the late 1980s rather than a leading RUC officer and as such McPhilemy discarded the tape as a clear hoax.[22] McPhilemy would eventually claim that the tape had been a deliberate attempt to wreck the credibility of his book as, had he included it as genuine evidence, Kerr would have brought out the real, uniquely named, Ezzard Boyd and thus made the claims in the book look like an entire fraud.[23] McPhilemy also rejected Kerr's claims to be a British agent and concluded that he had in fact been "the brains behind the paramilitary side of the Committee's assassination campaign".[24]

David and Albert Prentice subsequently sued McPhilemy, his publisher Roberts Rinehart and his TV production company Box Production for $100 million over his claims that they were involved in the committee. McPhilemy settled out of court for $1 million and released a statement acknowledging that the Prentices had no involvement in loyalist activity.[25] In a separate case however McPhilemy was awarded £145,000 in damages against The Sunday Times after they claimed that The Committee was a hoax.[26]

References

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  1. ^ Sean McPhilemy, The Committee: Political Assassination in Northern Ireland, Roberts Rinehart, 1999, p. 388
  2. ^ a b c Steve Bruce "Unionism Among the Paramilitaries", Ronnie Hanna, The Union: Essays on Ireland and the British Connection, Colourpoint Books, 2001, p. 76
  3. ^ "Security force members 'may have colluded in Derry killing'". BBC News. 21 September 2012. Archived from the original on 10 April 2021. Retrieved 21 June 2018.
  4. ^ Innocent man's son demands answers Archived 25 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Londonderry Sentinel
  5. ^ Gary McMichael, Ulster Voice, Roberts Rinehart, 1999, pp. 34-35
  6. ^ "Local Government Elections 1985 -1989: Derry". Archived from the original on 6 June 2007. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  7. ^ "Derry City Council Elections 1993-2005". Archived from the original on 10 June 2011. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  8. ^ Bruce in Hanna, The Union, p. 79
  9. ^ "Derry Journal February 1992". Archived from the original on 9 June 2012. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  10. ^ "Peter Heathwood Collection of Television Programmes 1992". Archived from the original on 23 October 2010. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  11. ^ "[[South Africa]]n link in Belfast murders". Archived from the original on 29 September 2012. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  12. ^ "Ulster awaits backlash after IRA guns down loyalist". Independent.co.uk. 11 July 1994. Archived from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved 30 October 2017.
  13. ^ "The 1996 Forum Elections: Regional List of Candidates". Archived from the original on 10 November 2016. Retrieved 24 June 2011.
  14. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, p. 61
  15. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, pp. 324-325
  16. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, p. 325
  17. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, pp. 393-395
  18. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, p. 327
  19. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, p. 326
  20. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, pp. 327-329
  21. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, pp. 329-330
  22. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, pp. 330-331
  23. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, p. 331
  24. ^ McPhilemy, The Committee, p. 339
  25. ^ "McPhilemy settles libel suit against 'Committee'". 16 February 2011. Archived from the original on 11 February 2015. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
  26. ^ "Businessmen get libel damages". Archived from the original on 11 August 2003. Retrieved 11 February 2015.
Political offices
Preceded by Leader of the Ulster Democratic Party
1987 - c.1990
Succeeded by