Prime Minister urged to travel to Northern Ireland to meet Ballymurphy families
Boris Johnson should travel to meet the families of the Ballymurphy victims, a former Northern Ireland secretary has urged.
Labour's Lord Murphy of Torfaen said all governments, including the Tony Blair administration in which he served, have "let these families down" over the last 50 years.
But he went on to criticise the Prime Minister's response to the coroner's ruling that 10 people who died in Belfast in August 1971 were "entirely innocent".
Last week Mrs Justice Keegan found that nine of the 10 had been killed by soldiers and that the use of lethal force was not justified.
The Ballymurphy families angrily rejected a letter of apology from Mr Johnson expressing his personal sorrow for the "terrible hurt that has been caused" by the deaths.
Responding in the upper House to a statement from the Government, Lord Murphy said: "I fully appreciate that the Government has apologised for this tragic event, but frankly they should go further.
"The Prime Minister should have delivered a statement himself in the chamber of the House of Commons, like his predecessor David Cameron on the Bloody Sunday Inquiry.
"Now he should travel to Northern Ireland to meet with the families personally. After 50 years, they deserve no less."
Liberal Democrat Lord Bruce of Bennachie added: "The Prime Minister's apology appears somewhat graceless and inadequate.
For the Government, Conservative whip Viscount Younger of Leckie said: "The Government's apology to the Ballymurphy families cannot change what they have endured.
"The PM, on behalf of the UK Government, the state, has apologised by writing to the families. He has also spoken to the First Minister and Deputy First Minister.
"(Northern Ireland Secretary) Brandon Lewis, in the Commons, has also apologised in his statement last Thursday, and today I add my own heartfelt apology."
Ulster Unionist Party peer Lord Empey asked the UK Government to provide resources to the "existing, established and acceptable security forces" to investigate any fresh evidence rather than spend "hundreds of millions of pounds on setting up new organisations that will take up to 15 years to complete their casework".
DUP peer Lord Dodds of Duncairn asked for assurances that the families of "forgotten" victims will receive recognition or an apology "from the political spokespersons of the terrorist groups - some of whom are in government today in Northern Ireland", adding: "Indeed can they expect justice as a result of the forthcoming proposals on legacy?"
Baroness Ritchie of Downpatrick, a non-affiliated peer and former SDLP MP, asked the Government whip: "Will he also ensure that the proposed legacy legislation reflects the Stormont House Agreement and ensures that there will be no amnesty for those who committed acts of murder, irrespective of whether they were military or paramilitary, in our society."