Kate Smith introduces the current affairs programme. The topics are selective internment and the BCCI [Bank of Credit and Commerce International] collapse, with contributions including pre-recorded interviews and in-studio panel discussion.
An increase in violence has led to increasing calls for the introduction of selective internment in Northern Ireland. The past history of internment in Northern Ireland, in the early to mid-1970s, is illustrated through archive footage - the women of Belfast banging bin lids in the street, signalling the beginning of internment roughly 20 years previously, followed by scenes army officers breaking into homes to make arrests.
Paddy Joe McClean [Tyrone civil rights leader and former internee] states that "when a person is interned, they are taken away and denied their liberties." He also observes that it [internment] is used as "an instrument of oppression".
Paddy Devlin [SDLP founder and Stormont MP 1969-72], Sam Beattie [Police Federation] and Gen. Sir Anthony Farrar-Hockley [Commander, Land Forces NI 1970-71] offer their opinions on the issue, with the general consensus being that previously [in the 1970s] internment was "an unmitigated disaster".
In studio, Ken Maginnis [Ulster Unionist Party MP] believes the current situation calls for selective internment, though states that it needs to happen equally, i.e. to both sides of the community. Seamus Mallon [SDLP MP] rebuffs this idea and says that all internment is selective and that it has a track record of not working, in fact it only ignites more violence.
The next topic of conversation is the BCCI collapse and how Lisburn and the Scottish Western Isles Councils have lost millions due to their investments in the bank.