AN UNDERCOVER British army unit accused of shooting a young mother in 1972 is back in the spotlight after a Belfast court ordered a new investigation into her killing.
Jean Smyth-Campbell died in a drive-by shooting in west Belfast aged 24 on the night of June 8, 1972, at the height of the Troubles.
The IRA was initially blamed by police, but evidence later emerged that an undercover British army unit could have carried out the killing.
AARON SMITH discusses why the Protestant diaspora are still part of Yeats’s ‘Indomitable Irishry’, and an integral part of any future united Ireland.
A new group within the NEU is preparing the labour movement for a conversation on Irish unity by arguing that true liberation must be rooted in working-class solidarity and anti-sectarianism, writes ROBERT POOLE
Why not pay a visit to Feile an Phobail, a people’s festival of community arts with roots in the days of internment without trial, and where the spirit of solidarity remains undimmed, says LYNDA WALKER
As the cover-ups collapse, IAN SINCLAIR looks at the shocking testimony from British forces who would ‘go in and shoot everyone sleeping there’ during night raids — illegal, systematic murder spawned by an illegal invasion


