Liam Holden, Given Death Sentence For Murder Of Frank Bell, Has Conviction Quashed

Last Man Handed Death Sentence In Northern Ireland Has Conviction Quashed

The last man to be handed the death sentence in Northern Ireland has had his conviction for murder quashed.

Liam Holden, 58, was sentenced to hang for the killing of a British soldier in 1972. He said he was water tortured, hooded and had a gun put to his head by soldiers to extract a confession.

As the Court of Appeal in Belfast made the ruling, Mr Holden said he was "delighted" with the result.

"I am not going to go do somersaults down the streets because it is 40 years on and I am an awful lot older," he added.

"I am delighted that it is over and I will melt back into the background and get on with it."

Thursday's appeal was held against his conviction for the murder of Private Frank Bell, 18, who was shot dead on foot patrol in Springfield Avenue in West Belfast on September 17, 1972.

Mr Holden was found guilty on the basis of a confession that he maintains was made under duress after being subjected to waterboarding. He claimed he was pinned to the floor, a thick towel was held over his face and the soldiers started pouring water on it.

The widowed father-of-two said he was also taken to another part of Belfast and a gun was put to his head, at which point he agreed to sign the confession.

Mr Holden's sentence had been commuted to life in prison by then Northern Ireland Secretary William Whitelaw. He served 17 years behind bars before being released on licence in 1989.

Hhe said: "What the soldiers did to me ... water torture, hooding, putting the gun to my head, no one will ever get a real feeling of what it is like, it is like a slow drowning sensation."

He said other people went through similar ordeals, adding he hoped the publicity would help bring those matters, including the Army's alleged use of water torture, into the public domain.

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