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Search for Disappeared soldier Robert Nairac to begin on Irish border

Capt Nairac is believed to have been abducted and killed by the IRA while on an undercover operation in a pub in south Armagh in 1977.

Rebecca Black
Monday 26 August 2024 00:01 BST
Grenadier Guards Captain Robert Nairac talking to children in the Ardoyne area of Belfast in 1972 (PA)
Grenadier Guards Captain Robert Nairac talking to children in the Ardoyne area of Belfast in 1972 (PA) (PA Archive)

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A search is set to start in a remote area of the Irish border for Disappeared soldier Robert Nairac.

The British Army officer is believed to have been abducted by the Provisional IRA while on an undercover operation in a pub in south Armagh in 1977 and taken across the border to Flurry Bridge in County Louth where he was killed.

The remains of the Grenadier Guards captain have never been found.

Capt Nairac is considered to be part of a group of 16 people, known as the Disappeared, who were killed and secretly buried by paramilitary groups.

We are not time-limited but given the relatively small area, by our standards, I do not anticipate a protracted search period of many months

Jon Hill

In 2019, a preliminary examination of a site at Ravensdale Forest in Co Louth was carried out.

The Independent Commission for the Location of Victims’ Remains (ICLVR), which has located the remains of a number of the Disappeared, said it will be its first search for Capt Nairac.

It is to take place in the Faughart area, also in Co Louth.

Jon Hill, the lead investigator of the ICLVR said while Capt Nairac is one of the highest profile of the Disappeared, they have had “very little to go on”.

“We believe that we do now have sufficient credible information to warrant a search,” he said.

He said the search will differ in a number of ways from the organisation’s last search which was for Co Tyrone teenager Columba McVeigh at Bragan Bog in Co Monaghan.

The search for Capt Nairac will be carried out on private land, and Mr Hill said he wanted to make it clear that neither the landowner nor the tenant have any connection with the decision to search that location.

“The area itself is relatively small, less than one acre, and farmland is inherently more stable than the bogland we have had to work on in other searches for the Disappeared,” he said.

“And so, while the weather is always a factor we have to deal with, I would hope that we will get a relatively clear run at this one.”

The search, on a site which is part of an area of significant archaeological interest, is being support by Ireland’s National Monuments Service.

“We are grateful for the support and co-operation of the National Monuments Service who have an interest in the wider area in which the Hill of Faughart has been identified as a 14th century battle site,” he said.

“Given that we may uncover archaeology or even historic remains, we have taken additional measures to cater for that eventuality and so we don’t anticipate that causing any insurmountable issues with our search.”

I am not going to put a number on the degree of confidence that we have that we will find the remains of Robert Nairac but what I can say is that if they are there we have the skills, ability and experience to find them

Jon Hill

Mr Hill said the search will continue until they have found the remains or are satisfied there is nothing there to find.

“We are not time-limited but given the relatively small area, by our standards, I do not anticipate a protracted search period of many months,” he said.

“The Nairac family have been told that a search is about to commence and we will of course keep them informed of any developments.”

He added: “I am not going to put a number on the degree of confidence that we have that we will find the remains of Robert Nairac but what I can say is that if they are there we have the skills, ability and experience to find them.”

The ICLVR has also reissued an appeal for information about other remaining Disappeared cases, including Joe Lynskey, Columba McVeigh and Seamus Maguire.

“All information is treated in the strictest confidence,” it said.

The ICLVR can be contacted by telephone: 00353 1 602 8655, email to secretary@iclvr.ie or by post to: ICLVR PO Box 10827

Crimestoppers can be contacted on 0800 555 111 or the untraceable anonymous online form can be found on crimestoppers-uk.org.

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