
Miami Showband attack was 'worst sight anyone could ever imagine', says survivor
Des Lee said he remembers 'every single thing in the finest detail' from the atrocity on July 31 1975.
'It was the most horrendous scene I have ever seen in my life, when I got up off the grass and I had to make a run up that embankment to get help.
'When I got onto the main road, it was the worst sight anyone could ever imagine,' he told the BBC Radio Ulster.
'They were my brothers, you know, three of my brothers.'
The band had been travelling to Dublin after a gig in Banbridge when they were stopped by a fake Army patrol involving the loyalist paramilitary group the Ulster Volunteer Force just outside Newry.
A bomb which was placed on the bus exploded prematurely, killing two of the attackers, Harris Boyle and Wesley Somerville, before singer Fran O'Toole, guitarist Tony Geraghty and trumpeter Brian McCoy were shot dead.
The last photo of the Miami Showband taken before the massacre on July 31, 1975. From left to right: Tony Geraghty, Fran O'Toole, Ray Miller, Des Lee, Brian McCoy and Stephen Travers
While there has been criticism of a loyalist band parade planned to take place in Portadown on Saturday to remember one of the attackers, Mr Lee said he has 'no problem with that whatsoever'.
'They are entitled to commemorate their dead as much as we are entitled to commemorate ours,' he said.
He was, however, critical of the British government over its handling of the past, saying he feels they are doing a 'dreadful job'.
'They're trying to push all the families under the carpet and hope that it all goes away, and as long as I'm alive, I will fight for Fran, Brian and Tony,' he said.
Mr Lee was speaking ahead of a number of commemorations which will take place across Thursday, including one at the roadside where the attack took place.
He said he expected it will be an 'extremely difficult day'.
'My whole philosophy in life now is forgive and forget and move on,' he said.
'I don't hold any grudge. What happened to my friends was appalling but I don't want to live for the rest of my life living in the past.
But there's one thing we must never forget, Fran O'Toole, Brian McCoy and Tony Geraghty.
He described their only weapons as having been instruments to entertain audiences 'during that awful time' in Northern Ireland in the 1970s.
'Fran had a microphone, Brian had a trumpet, and Tony had a guitar. That was the weapons that they had during that awful time in Northern Ireland, bringing two hours of peace and joy and happiness and dance and love and kindness and everything that went with it,' he said.
'That was our job to entertain those people for two hours, no matter what religion, no matter what creed.
'We were a band that were mixed, and we had never any problems regarding religion or anything. Our job was to entertain people, and that's what we did.'

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The Journal
4 hours ago
- The Journal
Debunked: Fox News claims about an Irish crime wave are based on discredited claims and bad stats
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The same cannot be said for the crime statistics. The other statistics Fox sourced to the CSO are the claims that robberies in Ireland are up 18% and violent crime is up 10% in Q1 2024. However, there is an immediate problem. 'The CSO do not publish incidents by the category of 'violent crime' or 'robberies' alone,' a spokesperson for the CSO wrote to The Journal . 'The coverage you refer to does not reference the correct CSO crime categories or comparative timelines accurately.' In other words, the CSO has to label crimes and group them together under certain labels. But Fox News is not using these labels, making it hard to figure out what they are referring to. One might interpret 'violent crime' as referring to the category 'attempts/threats to murder, assaults, harassments and related offences'. However, compared to the previous quarter , CSO figures show a decrease of about 5%. Compared to the first quarter of 2023, it shows an increase of about 1%, not 10% as Fox said. So, what is Fox News talking about? Tellingly, the '10%' and '18%' figures also appear in a report released by the CSO in June 2024, however they refer to something else.' Advertisement Recorded incidents of Robbery, Extortion & Hijacking offences were up by 18% or 390 to 2,572 in the year to Quarter 1 (Q1) 2024 compared with the same period in 2023,' The CSO report reads. This gives us the timeframe; when Fox News is referring to crime in 2024, they actually mean the period from Q2 of 2023 to the end of Q1 of 2024 (April to March, essentially). While confusingly presented, this is a legitimate way of looking at stats, given Fox's figures for the population increase were also based on the same time period. However, Fox's labels are still very misleading. Would most people know that extortion was counted under 'robberies'? It seems that there is a closer resemblence to the CSO's category of 'Theft and related offences', though looking at this the increase drops more than half, to 8%, when comparing the same periods. On the other hand, the 10% figure comes from somewhere unexpected. 'Crime incidents involving Weapons & Explosives offences were up by 10%,' the CSO release says. This is obviously not the same thing as 'violent crime'. The data on Fox was presented inaccurately. However, aren't we just focussing on details? Isn't the important issue whether crime is increasing at the same time that we are seeing a surge in migration? Is that what the Fox figures indicate? Is that what the CSO stats on crime say? A bigger picture Let's look at the first crime figure cited (badly) by Fox. An 18% increase in recorded incidents of Robbery, Extortion & Hijacking offences in the year to Quarter 1 (Q1) 2024 compared with the same period in 2023. While this is an increase over the year before, it is also essentially in line with the same figures for most years prior to the pandemic. The figures were even higher for every year between Q1 2010 and Q1 2015. You don't need to even go so far back for the second category of crimes cited: 'Weapons & Explosives offences' (misleadingly called 'violent crime' by Fox). In the year up to Q1 2021, there were 6% more of these crimes than the same period up to 2024. In other words, Fox News is suggesting some kind of crime wave happened due to a surge of immigration in 2024. But the same crimes they (inaccurately) cite to make their point were worse in the past. Murder Capital However, what about the claim that there has been a staggering 114% increase in 'murder/assault attempts' in Dublin in 2024? Again, confusingly, there is no such category as 'murder/assault attempts', nor is a time frame given by Fox. If we look at ' homicide offences ' for the region, there were 19 in 2024, 20 in 2023, and 25 in 2022. In other words: homicide offences are decreasing. Another possible category they could be referring to is: 'Attempts/threats to murder, assaults, harassments and related offences'? These rose from 7,838 in 2023 to 8,581 in 2024, an increase of 9%, not 114% Nor does there seem to be a reasonable way to come up with such a large increase. (The online critique by Danny Boy suggests Fox are citing a right-wing website that used 2003 figures as a comparison). It might also be noted that it is odd for a news show in America to express horror at the crime statistics in Ireland when the homicide rate in America is multiple times that of Ireland. 'Most dangerous city' Finally, what about the claim on Fox News that Dublin 'now ranks among the top ten most dangerous cities in Europe.' The Journal previously debunked this claim in March after it was widely shared on social media, including by Conor McGregor. The headline about Dublin being one of the most dangerous cities in Europe was ultimately based on a website that ranks crime 'derived from surveys conducted by visitors to our website,' rather than from facts. 'There is absolutely no assurance that any statement contained on the website is correct or precise,' that site disclaims. However, as with other figures cited by Fox, a factual basis did not stop the claim from being aired. While comparing crime rates across countries is difficult, Ireland is consistently ranked as one of the safest countries in Europe and, by extension, the world. Want to be your own fact-checker? Visit our brand-new FactCheck Knowledge Bank for guides and toolkits The Journal's FactCheck is a signatory to the International Fact-Checking Network's Code of Principles. You can read it here . For information on how FactCheck works, what the verdicts mean, and how you can take part, check out our Reader's Guide here . You can read about the team of editors and reporters who work on the factchecks here . Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... It is vital that we surface facts from noise. Articles like this one brings you clarity, transparency and balance so you can make well-informed decisions. We set up FactCheck in 2016 to proactively expose false or misleading information, but to continue to deliver on this mission we need your support. Over 5,000 readers like you support us. If you can, please consider setting up a monthly payment or making a once-off donation to keep news free to everyone. Learn More Support The Journal


Sunday World
7 hours ago
- Sunday World
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The Irish Sun
10 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
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