Background
Fergal Caraher was born in Cullyhanna, County Armagh, Northern Ireland to a republican family.
Fergal Caraher was born in Cullyhanna, County Armagh, Northern Ireland to a republican family.
On 30 December 1990 he was killed by Royal Marines near a checkpoint in Cullyhanna. Michael Caraher was imprisoned in 1997, but released in 2000 under the prisoner release terms of the Good Friday Agreement. In 1996 Fergal Caraher"s sister Maria was elected to the Northern Ireland Forum in Newry and Armagh, but she did not stand in the subsequent Northern Ireland Assembly election, 1998.
She is currently the principal of Bunscoil an Iúir, an Irish language school in Newry.
In 1993, two Royal Marines were charged with Caraher"s murder. Both men, Lance Corporal Richard Elkington, 23, and Private Andrew Callaghan, 21, from the 45 Unit, denied the charges and were acquitted.
Prosecutors outlined that Elkington smashed the driver"s window with his rifle and opened fire on the car, ordering Callaghan to do likewise as the brothers attempted to drive from a public car park. They also stated that the investigation into the shooting had been hampered as British soldiers had removed spent bullet bullet cases instead of preserving the scene for police scenes-of-crime officers and that there was no lawful justification for firing on the car.
Elkington told police he had fired nine aimed shots at the driver, believing that a third soldier was being carried away on the bonnet of the car.
Callaghan stated that he fired 12 shots because he feared for the life of the third Marine, who was out of sight. Fergal Caraher is one of 24 Provisional Ireland Republican Army volunteers remembered at the South Armagh Memorial Garden in Mullaghbawn, near Slieve Gullion mountain.
Provisional Irish Republican Army]
He was a member of both the Provisional Ireland Republican Army and Sinn Féin.