Former Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams is in line for “a pay day from the taxpayer” under plans to repeal the Legacy Act, a report backed by several peers has stated.
The legislation presently blocks him – and many others interned without trial in the 1970s – from claiming compensation for unlawful detention.
Policy Exchange, a London-based think tank, has criticised moves to the lift the ban.
Labour began the process of repealing the act last December, in line with a manifesto commitment.
A UK Supreme Court judgement in 2020 paved the way for Mr Adams to receive damages after it quashed his convictions over two attempted prison break-outs.
It ruled his detention was unlawful because the interim custody order (ICO) had not been “considered personally” by the then Secretary of State Willie Whitelaw.
At the time, the last government argued the ICOs were lawful due to a convention known as the Carltona principle, where officials and junior ministers routinely act in the name of the Secretary of State.
A clause was inserted into the Legacy Act, blocking payouts to Mr Adams and around 400 other people interned in similar error.
Last February, the High Court ruled the parts of the act related to the ICOs were incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights.
The government has now tabled a remedial order in Parliament that will repeal various parts of the Legacy Act, including the sections covering ICOs.
The Policy Exchange paper criticising the move has been backed by 16 peers, including Shadow Attorney General Lord Wolfson KC.
He said: “The government’s decision to repeal sections 46 and 47 of the Northern Troubles Act 2023 is inexplicable and unexplained.
“Parliament must now ask hard questions about why the government is determined to override Parliament’s recent, unanimous decision to vindicate the Carltona principle and to block Gerry Adams from being paid public money.”
The government has been approached for comment.