Eamonn McCann | |
|---|---|
McCann in 2016 | |
| Member ofDerry City and Strabane District Council | |
| In office 2 May 2019 – 1 March 2021 | |
| Preceded by | Sharon Duddy |
| Succeeded by | Maeve O'Neill |
| Constituency | The Moor |
| Member of the Legislative Assembly forFoyle | |
| In office 5 May 2016 – 26 January 2017 | |
| Preceded by | Gerard Diver |
| Succeeded by | Seat abolished |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1943-03-10)10 March 1943 (age 82) |
| Political party | People Before Profit |
| Children | 3 |
| Alma mater | Queen's University Belfast |
Eamonn McCann (born 10 March 1943[1]) is an Irish politicalactivist, former politician and journalist fromDerry,Northern Ireland. McCann was aPeople Before Profit (PBP)Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) forFoyle from2016 to2017. In2019, he was elected toDerry City and Strabane District Council, remaining in the position until his resignation for health reasons in March 2021.
McCann was born and has lived most of his life in Derry. His father, Ned McCann, was a committed socialist and trade unionist. Growing up, trade union meetings would be held in the McCann household. Ned McCann would boast of being an "anti-Tory", that he had witnessedJames Connolly speaking on the corner of New Lodge Road and Lepper Street in Belfast, and that he had never once voted for an Irish nationalist once, always for Labour men.[2]
Raised Catholic, Eamonn McCann attendedSt. Columb's College and is prominently featured in the documentary film,The Boys of St. Columb's. He later attendedQueen's University Belfast, where he was president of theLiterary and Scientific Society, the university's debating society.[3] McCann left Queen's without graduating, a decision he says was forced on him by the university authorities acting in a sectarian manner towards someone they regarded as a troublemaker.[4]
As a young man he was one of the original organisers of theDerry Housing Action Committee (DHAC), a radical campaign group focusing on access to social housing. DHAC organised, in conjunction with theNorthern Ireland Civil Rights Association (NICRA), the second civil rights march in Northern Ireland. This march, which took place on 5 October 1968, is generally seen as the birthdate of theNorthern Ireland Civil Rights Movement. His political contemporaries includedBernadette Devlin, for whom he served as an election agent.[5] He stood for election in theFoyle constituency at the1969 Northern Ireland general election for theNorthern Ireland Labour Party, placing third with 1,993 votes (12.3% of the total).[6]
He was tried (as one of the so-calledRaytheon 9) in Belfast in May–June 2008 over alleged damage caused during the2006 War on Lebanon to a facility operated by multinational arms companyRaytheon in Derry. The jury unanimously acquitted McCann, and all the other defendants, of charges of criminal damage to property belonging to Raytheon. The jury had heard that the group's actions were prompted by repeated bombing of Lebanese property in which numerous civilians died, and the wish to protect those lives and that property from being attacked by Israeli forces with weapons, weaponry systems and missiles supplied by Raytheon. The judge dismissed charges ofaffray after hearing the prosecution evidence. However, McCann was convicted of the theft of two computer discs, for which he received a 12-month conditional discharge.[7]
In a statement outside the court, McCann said: "[We] have been vindicated. ... The jury have accepted that we were reasonable in our belief that ... Israeli ... Forces were guilty of war crimes in Lebanon in the summer of 2006. The action we took was intended to have, and did have, the effect of hampering or delaying the commission of war crimes".[7]
His appearance at the funeral of formerProvisional Irish Republican Army (IRA)volunteer,Old Bailey bomber, and republican activistDolours Price, and a tribute he paid to her, was criticised by a son-in-law ofJean McConville, who was kidnapped and murdered by the IRA. Price was suspected of being one of the paramilitaries who took part.[8][9][10] McCann explained that her family had asked him to speak at her funeral. He said: "I don't think I said anything at Dolours Price's grave that contradicted that [calling McConville's murder 'a horrible and unforgivable act'] ... The point I had in mind, the point I was making, was there are some people deeply implicated in the cruel murder of Mrs McConville who appear not to be undergoing any inner turmoil. They appear to find it very easy to handle the knowledge of their own involvement in that murder".[11]
He was elected as anMLA forFoyle in May 2016 but lost his seat in January 2017 when the number of seats in the Foyle constituency was reduced from six to five. McCann and People before Profit attracted criticism fromSinn Féin and pro-EU activists for supportingBrexit in an area with the fourth-highest 'Remain' vote (out of approximately 400 counting areas) in the whole of the United Kingdom.[12][13]
In May 2019 he was elected toDerry and Strabane District Council as a PBP candidate in The Moor electoral area.[14] In March 2021, he announced his resignation from the council for health reasons.[15]
McCann was central to the setting up of the Bloody Sunday Justice Campaign; the role of his investigative journalism and decades of campaigning for justice for the Bloody Sunday families was recognised in 2010 when several of the families proposed him for the Paul Foot Award for campaigning journalism. Their citation[16] said: "EAMONN McCANN has been using his journalism to campaign for justice for the Bloody Sunday families for almost 40 years. The publication of the Saville Report in June marked a victory for the families, a victory of which McCann was very much a part."
In February 1972, within a month of the killings, McCann published the first pamphlet on Bloody Sunday,What Happened in Derry. Throughout the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s he wrote about the injustice of Bloody Sunday whenever he got the opportunity. In the run-up to 1992, the 20th anniversary of the massacre, McCann made a proposal to the families for a book to mark the occasion. The publication ofBloody Sunday in Derry: What Really Happened was crucial in helping to bring together all the Bloody Sunday families for the first time into a single campaign.
Throughout the 1990s McCann wrote constantly about Bloody Sunday,[17] ensuring that every new piece of evidence about what had happened on the day and in the course of the subsequent cover-up was analysed and publicised. He wrote in the local Derry papers, in theBelfast Telegraph,[18]The Irish Times, theSunday Tribune, in the LondonIndependent,The Guardian,[19]The Observer – anywhere he could place a story. With the announcement of the Saville Tribunal, McCann's writing on Bloody Sunday came into its own. While other journalists focused only on the evidence of the more high-profile witnesses, McCann attended almost every day of the tribunal. He attended the hearings in London's Central Hall, paying his own costs to travel to and from London and staying with family while there. He wrote a weekly analysis for the Sunday Tribune in Dublin, and covered the proceedings daily for the Irish commercial radio station Today FM, as well as contributing articles to the Guardian, Observer, Irish Times, Irish Mirror and Irish Daily Mail.

McCann currently writes for theBelfast Telegraph,The Irish Times and theDerry Journal. He has written a column for theDublin-based magazineHot Press, and is a frequent commentator on theBBC,RTÉ and other broadcast media. He worked as a journalist for theSunday World newspaper and contributed to the originalIn Dublin magazine, among others.[21][22][23]
Much of his journalistic work reflects what he himself describes[24] as a "shuddering fascination" with religion which, when coupled with his profound skepticism, has made it a topic to which he has often returned.[22][25]
In March 2008, McCann spoke withNational Public Radio in the United States about the solidarity between the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland and thecivil rights movement in the U.S.[26]
In March 2014, followingCrimea's referendum on joining Russia, McCann had a piece published inThe Irish Times on the situation there. He commented: "After six years in office, Obama believes he has a right to invade anywhere, bomb anything, kill anybody whose jib the CIA doesn't like the cut of, irrespective of national or international law or, indeed, of the provisions of the US constitution. And now he lectures Putin on the necessity of 'respecting international law'. He has a nerve." In the same piece, he wrote: "Vladimir Putin may run a vicious regime but the people of Crimea have a right to be accepted as Russian if that's what they want, which evidently they do",[27] and added: "Putin is right that the main motivation of the US andNATO has been to encircle and enfeeble his country. It might be a close-run thing, but in this instance, Russia has more right on its side than the West".[27]
In 2021, McCann was interviewed during theDocs Ireland documentary festival in Belfast, following a screening ofhis appearance onAfter Dark.[28]
He has also edited two books on Bloody Sunday:
McCann was the partner ofMary Holland (1935–2004), a journalist who worked forThe Observer andThe Irish Times. He has a daughter from that relationship, Kitty, who is now a journalist forThe Irish Times, and a son, Luke, who works for the US-based human rightsthink tank TheCenter for Economic and Social Rights. The academic and activistGoretti Horgan has been his partner since the mid-1980s and they have an adult daughter, Matty.[29]
McCann is a supporter ofDerry City F.C.[30] In the 2002 filmBloody Sunday, McCann was played by Irish actor Gerard Crossan.[31]
| Northern Ireland Assembly | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | MLA forFoyle 2016–2017 | Seat abolished |