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Woodward rules out Troubles' cash | Woodward rules out Troubles' cash |
(20 minutes later) | |
The Secretary of State has ruled out a £12,000 payment to all families bereaved as a result of the Troubles. | The Secretary of State has ruled out a £12,000 payment to all families bereaved as a result of the Troubles. |
The proposal from a group set up to advise on how to deal with the past, was strongly criticised by victims. | |
Its chairmen, Lord Eames and Denis Bradley, are to appear before the House of Commons Northern Ireland Select Committee later on Wednesday. | |
Secretary of State Shaun Woodward said it was clear the "time is not right for such a recognition payment". | Secretary of State Shaun Woodward said it was clear the "time is not right for such a recognition payment". |
"I have decided however we proceed on this report, and there are many things I would like to consider in it, I do not think I will be proposing that this particular recommendation is one we should go forward on," he told the BBC. | "I have decided however we proceed on this report, and there are many things I would like to consider in it, I do not think I will be proposing that this particular recommendation is one we should go forward on," he told the BBC. |
"There isn't a consensus on it, it is an interesting idea, but very clearly the time is not right for a recognition payment." | |
The recommendation has come in a report compiled by the Consultative Group on the Past, an independent group set up to deal with the legacy of Northern Ireland's Troubles, during which more than 3,000 people died. | |
The proposal means the families of paramilitary victims, members of the security forces and civilians who were killed would all be entitled to the same amount. | |
The 190-page report, which contains more than 30 recommendations, goes to the government for consideration. |