Col Gadaffi: £2bn financial package

The Libyan and British governments are on the verge of finalising a deal which could see IRA victims securing up to £2m (€2.4m) each as compensation for Tripoli having provided weapons to republicans during the Troubles, campaigners have said.


Willie Frazer of Families Acting for Innocent Relatives (FAIR) said a £2bn financial package from Libya was on the table after negotiations involving Colonel Gadaffi's regime, the British Foreign Office, and campaigners.


Apart from the IRA victims' compensation, half the money from the package would be invested in the North's economy, Frazer said. "I'm told £1bn could be used for economic projects. I'll be arguing that Border areas, so often ignored, are targeted. The IRA campaign hit these places hard."


Although the package will be sold as cross-community and reconciliatory, IRA victims and the unionist community will be the major beneficiaries, and many nationalist victims of the Troubles may feel aggrieved.


Although the package will be sold as cross-community and reconciliatory, IRA victims and the unionist community will be the major beneficiaries, and many nationalist victims of the Troubles may feel aggrieved.


A total of 158 people, bereaved or injured in IRA attacks, put their names to a class action against Libya for supplying the Provisionals with guns and semtex. Libya has already paid $2.7bn to the families of those killed at Lockerbie in 1988 on Pan Am flight 103.


Frazer said four Americans on the IRA victims' class action – who were injured or bereaved in republican attacks in Britain – had already received $3m compensation each.


He believed a similar payout would be made to the other 154 British and Irish victims in the class action: "It will send a message to states which sponsor terrorism – sooner or later you'll be held accountable.


"Money won't bring back the dead but it will help families living in poverty since the breadwinner was murdered."


Frazer said around £800m of the package would be paid to victims. Apart from the 154 individuals on the class action – who will receive the biggest payments – the Sunday Tribune has been told there will be two other victims' schemes.


Smaller sums will be paid to victims of republican violence not involved in the class action. Victims of loyalist and state violence will be eligible for similarly smaller payments.


Sources also said £200m would be used for reconciliation projects in the North. One reportedly involves FAIR running a new victims' centre where the injured and bereaved can receive counselling or physical treatment as required. The centre would also house a living memorial museum.


Jonathan Ganesh, a security guard injured in the IRA's 1996 Canary Wharf bombing, said: "I can't confirm the details but things are looking very promising. Those injured in the docklands' attack were mainly immigrant cleaners, toilet attendants and security guards.


"They struggle to survive. Compensation will pay for help for the likes of Zaoui Berezag who suffered severe brain damage and needs 24/7 care." Ganesh, whose mother came from Limerick, said the money would make a "huge difference" to victims' lives.