that would have led up to a sum of money with interest being added week by week by week. and then they would have said, ok, you can t pay us back. could you deliver this package from a to b, probably drugs. that s shocking. that they or one of their family would have had to have couriered drugs for loyalist paramilitaries in order to repay that debt. that s my understanding of how it works. it wasn t police action that resolved the debt. in this case it was intermediaries on the ground negotiating with the paramilitaries. we stepped in, and through intermediaries got it sorted, and the original sum of money was returned and the person got their freezer. what would happen if those people didn t act as intermediaries? they are going to end
we had a person who, their freezer broke down, and they didn t have the money to replace their fridge freezer. and so they asked local paramilitaries, would they lend them money. to fix their freezer? to get a new one. so they borrowed £200. the £200, if it wasn t paid back within two weeks was going up with the interest rate as they would use it to £300. and that s the point they came to us. that would have led up to a sum of money with interest being added week by week by week. and then they would have said, ok, you can t pay us back. could you deliver this package from a to b, probably drugs. that s shocking. that they or one of their family would have had to have couriered drugs for loyalist paramilitaries in order to repay that debt.
and i had. you got a glimpse i m told, at school, and i had. you got a glimpse i m told, at school, from and i had. you got a glimpse i m told, at school, from a and i had. you got a glimpse i m told, at school, from a teacher, i and i had. you got a glimpse i m| told, at school, from a teacher, he gave you a glimpse that you didn t have to go along. have to go along. yeah. i mean, i su ose have to go along. yeah. i mean, i suopose my have to go along. yeah. i mean, i suopose my family have to go along. yeah. i mean, i suppose my family were - have to go along. yeah. i mean, i suppose my family were never . suppose my family were never particularly staunch but sounds odds when my dad is in the orange order, but they were not particularly stance, and my mum wasn t particularly political. at the thames kids would scribble on the blackboard when the teacher wasn t there, and given what was being scribbled on the walls at the time ijy scribbled on the walls at the time by adults
you know, but how can we? you know, no one is sorry. more than 3,500 people died during the period known as the troubles. the legislation will create a commission led by a judge which will gather information on crimes. cases can be brought to it by bereaved families, the government and some others. suspects who cooperate won t face a criminal investigation, but those who refuse can still be prosecuted if there s enough evidence. the question of how killings from the troubles should be investigated is hugely complex and contentious. in northern ireland, history still hurts. different people have different views on the past, how the conflict started, why it lasted so long, how it should be recorded and remembered. but most victims groups agree the government s plan is wrong. raymond mccord s son, who was also called raymond, was murdered by loyalist paramilitaries.