The NIHRC has been involved in a number of controversies since its creation.
Holy Cross case During Brice Dickson's tenure as chief commissioner, the NIHRC became involved in the
Holy Cross dispute in which
loyalists blockaded a girls' Primary School in
Ardoyne, Belfast in 2001 and 2002. Dickson disagreed with a decision by the NIHRC's casework committee to support a parent's legal challenge to the policing of the dispute, and wrote in those terms to the then Chief Constable of the
Royal Ulster Constabulary. The letter entered the public domain during the legal proceedings and caused internal disputes in the commission, leading to the resignation of some Commissioners and the 'withdrawal' of two others and criticism of the commission by community leaders. The Commission continued to fund the parent's case, which was ultimately unsuccessful in the
House of Lords, which itself was critical of the commission's intervention in the case.
Christy Walsh A Belfast man,
Christy Walsh, who was imprisoned during the
Troubles after conviction in a non-jury
Diplock court, sought the NIHRC's support during his lengthy and ultimately successful battle to have his conviction overturned. He has since sought judicial review of its conduct.
Acceptance of external funding The NIHRC has also come under criticism for accepting additional funding from
Atlantic Philanthropies, including £110,000 to fund its work on the development of proposals for a
Bill of Rights for Northern Ireland. The commission was offered an additional £30,000 by Atlantic in 2010, but its sponsor department, the Northern Ireland Office, refused it permission to accept the funding.
Association with Lynn Sheridan In June 2011 it was reported that the NIHRC had, in the course of its restructuring, engaged the services of a personnel consultant who had some years previously been struck off the nursing register for cruelty towards elderly patients. The restructuring resulted in a number of Industrial Tribunal (employment court) cases against the commission, which were settled from public funds with clauses binding the claimants to confidentiality.
Budget concerns The NIHRC's ability to work on legal cases has been reportedly facing limitations following repeated budget cuts. The human rights watchdog has a budget of only over £1.1m and argues that this figure too has been halved since 2010. Since 2009, the organization's number of staff members also fell from 32 to 14 on four occasions of annual budget cuts, out of the total eight taken place since then. ==See also==