Adrian Guelke

From Powerbase
Revision as of 23:54, 26 April 2008 by Tom Griffin (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

South African academic.

UDA shooting

Guelke was shot by the Ulster Defence Association in September 1991.

Guelke has criticised Paul Larkin's account of the incident.

The problem for Larkin is that my case hardly demonstrates the intimate level of collusion that he wishes to suggest existed among the Loyalists, elements of the security forces and the apartheid regime. Larkin claims that Brian Nelson, the UDA intelligence officer with both security-force and South African connections, had a role in supplying information about the file at the heart of my case. This seems highly improbable. Had the UDA had access to the file about Mr X, then it would have been impossible for the agent of South African Military Intelligence to exploit his contacts with the Loyalists to get me shot. The UFF would have realised from the outset that I was not Mr X. What is more, the readiness of an agent of South African Military Intelligence to behave in this way hardly pointed to a durable relationship between apartheid South Africa and the Loyalists.[1]

Guelke's version is arguably even more troubling, raising a question which he mentions only in passing. How did the South Africans get hold of a a British security force file.

References

  1. Unwittingly Demonstrating the Limits of Collusion, Adrian Guelke, Fortnight Magazine, May 2004.