Some
estates in the town, including Derrybeg were sealed off in the immediate
aftermath of internment, and remained so for several days with no vehicles
allowed to enter or leave.
Thus
began a long anti-internment campaign with protest marches and pickets, many
involving women and especially the relatives of the internees.
One
of the most controversial incidents was the shooting dead of local lad
12-year-old Kevin Heatley at the Derrybeg estate in February 1973.The schoolboy had been sitting on a wall
about 50 metres from his own home when a British soldier fired the single shot
which killed him.
By
coincidence a TV engineer, Frankie Finnegan who lived opposite was recording a
television programme at the moment when the shot was fired.The recording proved beyond doubt that the
Army story – that Kevin had been caught in the crossfire between soldiers and
the IRA – was false.
Mrs
Margot Haughey and her sister Mrs Mary Mathers happened to be in the vicinity
when the army patrol came along.They
described how one soldier had ‘strutted across’ from the shops, aimed his rifle
towards Main Avenue and fired one shot.
The
women ‘thought it was a plastic bullet’ and accused the soldier of ‘having
drink taken’.
When
the MP for South Armagh Paddy O’Hanlon visited Mrs Mathers’ home to take a
statement, he was dragged from the house by troops, put in a Land Rover and
taken to the UDR Centre but later released.
In
the longer term a soldier was charged with the murder but acquitted.
The
funeral was the largest ever seen in the FrontierTown.Black flags were flown everywhere and
photographs of the victim appeared in many windows.
There
is a small stone embedded in a garden boundary wall on Main Avenue to commemorate the innocent
lad.