More victims of the Troubles announce challenges to legacy legislation

A number of protests have been held in opposition to the Governmentâs new legacy legislation (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Further victims of the Troubles in Northern Ireland have announced legal challenges against the British governmentâs new legacy legislation.
The victims, who are supported by Amnesty International and represented by Phoenix Law, plan to challenge the new Act over its denial of future inquests and its ban on civil claims.
The Northern Ireland Troubles (Legacy and Reconciliation) Act received royal assent on Monday despite widespread opposition from political parties and victimsâ organisations in Northern Ireland.
The most controversial aspects of the laws include a limited form of immunity from prosecution for Troubles-related offences to those who co-operate with the new Independent Commission for Reconciliation and Information Recovery and the ending of future civil cases and inquests.

Legal firms Madden & Finucane and KRW Law and victims campaigner Raymond McCord have already announced legal action over the legislation, which Northern Ireland Secretary Chris Heaton-Harris said provides a âreal opportunity to deliver greater information, accountability and acknowledgement to victims and familiesâ.
The Irish Government has also said it is seeking legal advice over taking an inter-state case against the British government.
Several victims who had inquests, independent investigations or civil claims pending have backed the latest legal challenge.
Amnestyâs Northern Ireland deputy director Grainne Teggart said: âWe made it clear that if this Bill became an Act â we would continue to stand with victims and fight against this unacceptable denial of rights.
âThe UK Government blatantly shunned victimsâ rights and pushed through a law only it wanted.
âThis heinous act of wrong must not stand; it is now over to the courts to right this historic wrong.â

Martina Dillon had been waiting for an inquest into the death of her husband Seamus Dillon, who was shot and killed in 1997.
She said: âEvery day my heart aches and yearns for my husband and the trauma of his killing has been exacerbated by this law.
âTruth and justice are not much to ask, we shouldnât have to fight for decades to get it.
âI will fight this oppressive legislation in my husbandâs memory and in solidarity with other victims having their rights denied. The clock is ticking for victims, we hope the courts will treat this with urgency.â
Darragh Mackin, from Phoenix Law, said: âFrom its inception, international human rights experts have warned the Government that this Act violates rights and fail to put victims at the centre of legacy processes.
âAccess to justice is a cornerstone of any democratic society.â
John McEvoy was seriously injured and narrowly avoided death during a gun attack in 1992.
He said: âThe past is still the present, I narrowly escaped death and live with the impact of that gun attack every day.
âAs victims, we have been affected in different ways, but we all stand to lose out by this law which grossly denies us our rights, thatâs why weâve come together to challenge it.
âWe are determined to get answers and accountability, we wonât stop fighting until that happens.â
Other applicants in the case are Brigid Hughes, whose husband Anthony was shot in 1987, and Lynda McManus, whose father John McManus was severely injured in the gun attack on Sean Graham bookmakers in Belfast in 1992.