Pubdate: Sat, 15 Jan 2000
Source: Irish Times (Ireland)
Copyright: 2000 The Irish Times
Contact:  11-15 D'Olier St, Dublin 2, Ireland
Fax: + 353 1 671 9407
Website: http://www.ireland.com/
Author: Kathy Sheridan

EXPERIENCING NEW DEPTHS OF VULNERABILITY AND TERROR

Faith in the protection of the law is at a new low in Ballyfermot following
the murder of two young men. Kathy Sheridan reports on the fears of local
people.

The two men were shot dead and dumped in a canal in a remote area of north
Kildare. Another young man is lying low, telling friends that his girl
friend has been confronted by armed men in balaclavas with the warning that
he would be next. He says that despite reports to the contrary he has no
Garda protection.

Meanwhile in Ballyfermot, a few miles from Dublin's city centre, a new low
of isolation, vulnerability and terror is palpable in the population. Huge
numbers of them packed the vast church for Patrick Murray's removal on Wed
nesday, many of them teenagers in shock. Meanwhile, adults who have lived
all their lives in the area, some of whom have sacrificed much to bring
about change, are now so fearful that they will speak only on condition of
anonymity.

"There'd be a petrol bomb under the house . . . "

"I'd be shot . . . "

Their faith in justice and the protection of the law has gone. With this
week's atrocity, a growing sense that the balance of power has been shifting
towards the drug gangs has been vindicated. The 24-year-old man they believe
to be responsible for the latest murders and for much of the area's recent
suffering has been offending with impunity for a long, long time, they say.

Such is the fear of his vicious, psychopathic reputation, that the use of
his name alone - in what should have been a safe place - is sufficient to
cause a strong woman to raise a finger to her lips and say "Shhh".

That one young man could wield such power through terror would be considered
outrageous in other communities, but for the people of Ballyfermot he is
only one of three names which trip off the tongue, when considering the kind
of man capable of such deeds. And this one, they say, has led a charmed
life.

"The guards have been aware of this guy's activities for years and he seemed
able to walk away from every incident," added a woman. "They even admit that
they know who he is. The papers and television have been writing about him
all week, using information given by the guards. So why wasn't something
done before this? Why weren't they sitting on him like they did in other
cases? Why do they keep pushing the responsibility for producing evidence
back on us, instead of using their interviewing and investigation training
to get convictions?"

A few years ago, said another woman, she would have defended the Garda. "I
think some of them were being intimidated themselves and maybe they began to
see us as a lost cause, but I don't have that sympathy for them anymore.

"I know of several cases where that same fellow turned up wearing a balacla
va and shooting into the air, and the peo ple he was threatening wouldn't
even bother ringing the police. That's how things are here now. They just
feel nothing will be done. In a case I know of where a group of innocent
young people were attacked like that, and it was reported, no one ever came
back to tell them what happened or to reassure them or even to refer some of
the kids to Victim Support. Now imagine if something like that happened in
Dalkey or Ballsbridge.

"We know there are some great individual gardai but the institutional view
seems to be that as long as the problem is confined to Ballyfermot they're
not going to push themselves. The intensive policing exercise that went on
here a few years ago showed the level of the dealing that was going on. It
also proved that the vast majority of those involved were coming in from
outside the area.

"What had the gardai done to stop that developing and festering? How did the
dealers get the space to run these massive businesses? The fact that most of
these gangs have gone underground this week proves the point. They know the
gardai are under pressure to pull people in, so they disappeared. Why isn't
that kind of pressure there all the time?"

This alienation permeates the view of the Ballyfermot population, and not
only those who phone the tabloid talk shows. "I've lived here for 40 years
and reared my kids here, but I'm completely demoralised after this. For the
first time, I feel like selling up and getting out," said another woman.
"Before this, no matter what happened, I used to feel there was hope. I
don't feel that any more. The latest rumour now is that X [another criminal
in custody on serious charges] will get off in exchange for saying where
another body is buried."

More worrying still is the widespread reluctance to place any trust in Garda
confidentiality. Some believe, for example, that unauthorised outsiders seem
to be able to access witness statements. They even question whether any
meaningful manhunt was put in place for the two young men, reported missing
over a week before their bodies were found.

The problem with such allegations is not whether they are true or false (and
there is absolutely no evidence to suggest that they are true) but that they
represent a sincerely held view among intelligent, well-intentioned people.

"If there's such a level of distrust in the area towards the guards, how can
they expect co-operation?" asked a man. "People are terrified enough
already."

Meanwhile, despite the economic boom and the sustained labours of drugs task
forces and other bodies, the view among Ballyfermot residents is that the
drug problem has not receded an inch. Local people say they believe now that
the problem is not so much one of deprivation as of availability and the
fact that the trade has been allowed to flourish in certain areas.
"Obviously, a kid in an area awash with heroin is a hundred times more
likely to try it than a kid who lives away from it."

In fact, the perception is that drug supplies are plentiful, that the age
threshold - for couriers and addicts - has fallen to as low as 12 and 13,
and that the waiting lists for vital services have risen. The Methadone
Protocol introduced in 1998 to tighten up methadone prescribing, while
working well at the control level, has also led to a huge upsurge of demand
on the services and the disappearance of physeptone off the streets. One
young woman whose sister tried to get on to a detoxification programme says
she was offered "a lifetime on methadone" or a detox bed in two years, if
she was lucky.

Locals say they are accustomed to the sight of mothers seeking out pushers
for a pounds 20 heroin fix for a child whose withdrawal symptoms have become
too agonising to watch, or mothers who resort to moneylenders to pay a
child's drug debts, sometimes when the latter has already suffered a brutal
battering from the dealer's henchmen.

Such experiences have produced a merciless response to the deaths of young
men like Patrick Murray and Darren Carey. There was no evidence that the men
were addicts and so no quarter would be given, despite the haunting image of
Darren Carey's father trawling the pubs around the New Year, desperately
trying to make contact with paramilitaries who might know what had befallen
his son.

On the airwaves and the streets, there was a sense of gloating that the
"scum bags were wiping each other out", an in ference fed by speculative
media repor ting, suggesting that a bullet in the head was proper order for
everyone involved. Police sources speculated that the two men were in debt
to the drug gang, linking them to Dutch drug barons.

As a result of such comments, the two distraught mothers were goaded into
making public statements, one claiming her son's total innocence, the other
to say that her son had been "forced" to courier heroin from Amsterdam to
Dublin. It was only as the week progressed, when Garda "sources" began to
concede that Darren Carey might indeed have been been an "innocent victim",
that the dangers of rough justice began to manifest themselves.

Father Charlie Hoey, who served in Ballyfermot up to 11/2 years ago and
presided over Patrick Murray's funeral, appealed to the many young people
present not to allow themselves to be "used by drug dealers . . . They will
never bring you happiness and only care about lining their own pockets."

The question remains why some people get sucked into drugs and others do
not. Whatever the truth of their activities, it appears that both Patrick
and Darren were loved. Darren, say neighbours, was his mother's "rock" and
never gave any trouble. Patrick came from a strong, tight-knit loving family
where, if the mother suspected any drug involvement on his part, said a
friend, "he'd have got a good hiding".

The problem for both, it seems, is that drugs were allowed to infest their
streets, their playgrounds and their friends. A survey just published by
DEFY - Development Education for Youth - shows that the main issues aff
ecting 1,000 young people aged between 12 and 24 were the lack of facilities
and drugs. The price of ignoring such signals was manifest this week in the
faces of two grieving families and a shocked, despairing community.
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