Pubdate: Sun, 09 Dec 2001 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2001 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Author: Henry McDonald 'NEW PROOF' LINKS IRA TO DRUG TERROR New evidence has been uncovered to link the Provisional IRA with a terrorist group involved in the Colombian drugs trade, according to a leading figure in the United States Congress. Democrat William Delahunt, who heads the congressional investigation into the role of the IRA in Colombia, has also revealed that the CIA is to be asked to give evidence about the republicans' connection with Farc, the Marxist guerrilla group involved in producing cocaine and heroin. Three Irishmen - two of them convicted IRA members, the other a Sinn Fein activist - were arrested in Bogotá while trying to leave Colombia on 11 August. The Colombian authorities allege the trio were training with Farc guerrillas. Delahunt has confirmed that his inquiry has unearthed fresh details about the IRA's presence in Colombia and its relations with Farc. 'There is new information but I cannot at this stage disclose exactly what this is because that would prejudice the inquiry,' he said in Washington. His committee would ask the CIA to appear before it in April. 'I would be surprised if they did not have information for us,' he said. Delahunt denied that committee members had come under pressure from the US State Department or the Irish government not to hold the inquiry in public and allow it to be televised. Delahunt confirmed he travelled to Cuba last month where he sought information on the role of Niall Connolly, one of the republican trio. 'The Cuban government expanded on their original statement and told me that he was Sinn Fein's delegate to the Cuban Communist Party. They said he had been in Cuba for up to six years, that he married a Cuban woman and that he left for Ireland between April and May this year.' Delahunt is due to travel to Colombia in March to talk to the government about the allegations of weapons training and development involving the IRA and Farc. He said the congressional hearing would offer Sinn Fein's representatives in North America a chance to put their side of the story. The Observer has learnt that the Colombian authorities now believe one of the Irishmen is an expert in armour-piercing technology and was sharing his knowledge with both Farc and the Basque terror group, Eta. The three include James Monaghan, an IRA veteran who invented the Provisionals' mortar in the Seventies. Monaghan was arrested with another convicted IRA man, Martin McCauley, who served a prison sentence for possessing illegal weapons. The other Irishman arrested is Niall Connolly, a Sinn Fein member. The three were moved last week from La Picota jail in Bogotá to a military police station after allegations that their lives were in danger. A loaded pistol had been found in the cell next to theirs. A campaign has been launched in Ireland to have them repatriated. The Bring Them Home committee's supporters include singer Christy Moore, the former Beirut hostage Brian Keenan and a BBC Northern Ireland drama producer, Pam Brighton. The Irish government, however, is reluctant to upset the Bush administration - which recently gave $1 billion to fund Colombia's fight against Farc and the drugs trade - by asking for the men's release. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens