Mark Haddock is on the run
Terry Fairfield was stabbed in the neck
UVF fugitive Mark Haddock has been in touch with former terror pals back in Northern Ireland
The one paramilitary kingpin has been pleading with his one time friends in the UVF to offer him sanctuary as he goes on the run after brutally stabbing his only friend.
Paranoid Haddock has gone native after stabbing lifelong friend Terry `The Mechnic' Fairfield in the neck in a drunken rage in England and is now the subject of a nationwide manhunt.
Special Branch agent Fairfield, first unmasked by the Sunday World as a security force informant has been living under an assumed identity for more than a decade after fleeing Northern Ireland, he has been running a pub in Milton Keynes and sheltering former Mount Vernon UVF commander Haddock.
Three years ago the Sunday World tracked Haddock to his pal's English bolt hole and confronted him about his murderous past, and how he was allowed to continue working for the security services.
Despite overwhelming evidence that Haddock was involved in up to a dozen murders while working for the police he has evaded sentence.
Farifield suffered serious stab injuries to his neck as a result of the assault which happened as the pair enjoyed a night on the town.
Haddock has since disappeared having dumped his car and mobile phone in an attempt to stay one step ahead of the law.
Fairfield earned his Mechanic nickname because he supplied cars to the UVF for terrorist assaults - most famously he supplied the car used in the Heights Bar massacre in 1994 when six innocents were gunned down in the village of Loughinisland as they watched Ireland play Italy in a World Cup match.
Haddock, who had been making frequent return trips to Belfast to stay with his girlfriend attacked Fairfield - godfather to his child - because of paranoia that his pal was set to give evidence against him in a forthcoming supergrass trial.
Sources have told the Sunday World the fallen terror boss has become increasingly addicted to subscription and illegal drugs and had become prone to violent mood swings.