SAOIRSE32

6/2/2005

Adams: messenger role abused

Irish American Information Service

SINN FEIN’S MESSENGER ROLE ABUSED SAYS ADAMS

02/05/05 10:10 EST

Sinn Fein’s role as messengers for the IRA has been abused by the British and Irish governments, Mr Gerry Adams claimed today.

Mr Adams said today that the peace process remained a priority for the republican movement and he demanded a similar commitment from everybody else.

Speaking after an AGM of party members in Dublin, Mr Adams said: “The electoral mandate of the Sinn Fein party has been ignored. We remain wedded to our peace strategy.”

Mr Adams added that the “mishandling” of recent peace efforts has been “extremely damaging to the peace process”.

He added: “They need to take their heads out of their asses for a start.”

He added that there was an understandably “huge focus” on the IRA at the moment, but he urged everybody to adopt a sensitive approach on the road to peace.

“Sinn Fein is totally opposed to any return to conflict, we are totally wedded to our peace strategy. We resent greatly any suggestion to the contrary,” Mr Adams told journalists in Dublin.

Mr Adams said the Irish and British governments needed to be less confrontational.

“Government ministers doing meetings with Sinn Fein which are businesslike meetings and then presenting them to the media as confrontational, as high-noon … isn’t helpful whatsoever,” he said.

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Belfast’s St Patrick’s Day carnival

Newshound

Council talks on festival funding

Barry McCaffrey
Irish News
4 FEB 05

Nationalists and unionists will meet this morning for talks over funding for a St Patrick’s Day Carnival at Belfast City Hall.

In recent years the March 17 event has been criticised for failing to attract the Protestant community, with unionist councillors raising concerns over the flying of Irish tricolours.

However, this year’s funding application appears to have proved less controversial, with organisers adopting a multi-coloured shamrock as the carnival’s official emblem.

A further sign of improved cooperation between nationalists and unionists in Belfast City Council is that two of its most influential committees have already approved the £30,000 grant for this year’s event.

“The council’s good relations committee and its policy and resources committee have both recommended £30,000 funding for this year’s event,” carnival organiser Conor Maskey said.

“That is a major step forward from previous years and we are hopeful that this will be guaranteed today.

“It is fair to say that we have had very positive feedback from a broad spectrum of councillors during meetings about this year’s carnival.

“We took a conscious decision to try and defuse tensions over the flags issue by creating the multi-coloured shamrock.

“We have asked unionist community groups to come on board and hopefully they will.”

Mr Maskey said he remained confident that the funding issue would be agreed today, despite Ulster Unionist councillor Bob Stoker requesting more clarification earlier this week.

Mr Stoker, who is due to meet carnival organisers this morning, said he was not against funding for the event but simply needed more assurances.

“Their funding application is very positive and meets the necessary criteria. The problem is that there were no councillors present when this funding was passed by the good relations committee,” he said.

“My concern is about procedures, not the funding application.

“I would like to see more inclusion from the Protestant community and I will raise that matter with organisers when we meet today.”

February 6, 2005
________________

This article appeared first in the February 4, 2005 edition of the Irish News.

SF: don’t break ceasefire

IRA2

Sinn Féin tells IRA not to break ceasefire

LONDON (Reuters) - The IRA’s political ally Sinn Fein has urged the
paramilitary group not to return to violence after its withdrawal of
a conditional offer to put its weapons beyond use.

“Sinn Fein is totally and absolutely opposed to any return to
conflict,” deputy leader Martin McGuinness told Sky Television on
Sunday.

When pressed on whether he would “categorically” tell Republican
paramilitaries and the Provisional IRA not to break the ceasefire,
McGuinness said he would tell all parties to avoid violence:

“That is very strongly my position. Not just to people on the
Republican side, but to people on the loyalist side, to undercover
elements within the British military and to the British Army in South
Armagh.”

Efforts to forge a political settlement between the British-ruled
province’s feuding Catholic and Protestant communities ground to a
halt in December after a 26.5 million pounds bank heist Britain and
Ireland blamed on the IRA.

Last week the outlawed group withdrew a conditional offer to put its
weapons beyond use, although the statement did not explicitly
threaten to end its 1997 ceasefire.

McGuinness said the political stalemate would not be broken by fresh
unrest.

“We believe the peace process is the best way forward,” said
McGuinness, who along with leader Gerry Adams is regularly accused of
being a member of the IRA’s ruling seven-man “Army Council”. Sinn
Fein has always denied this.

The British and Irish governments have said they do not believe the
withdrawal means the IRA is preparing to plunge the province back
into the violence that has cost 3,600 lives over 30 years.

Although the killings have largely stopped in Northern Ireland,
politics have been deadlocked since 2002 when a regional government
set up to share power between Protestants, who mainly support British
rule, and Catholics, who mostly want a united Ireland, broke down.

Britain and Ireland have heaped criticism on the IRA, saying its
refusal to give up paramilitarisim and crime are to blame for the
failure in efforts to return the province to self-rule

St Peter’s Cathedral - Belfast

BBC

Cathedral opens after renovation


Almost a third of its sandstone needed to be replaced

One of Belfast’s most famous cathedrals is to open its doors to the public on Sunday after 18 months of major renovation work.

Built more than 150 years ago, St Peter’s Cathedral on the Falls Road was closed for repairs in August 2003.

Almost a third of the sandstone in the cathedral needed to be replaced.

Representatives from the Church of Ireland, Presbyterian and Methodist churches have all been invited to the reopening ceremony.

For those unable to attend, the church is broadcasting the ceremony on its website:

http://www.stpeterscathedralbelfast.com/

gun crime convictions

BreakingNews.ie

Labour alarm at gun crime figures

06/02/2005 - 14:27:28

New figures have shown fewer than one in six murder cases in which guns were used over the past seven years resulted in convictions in the courts.

The data was obtained by Labour Justice spokesman Joe Costello TD from the Minister for Justice Michael McDowell.

The statistics reveal that firearms have been used in 75 murders between 1998 and 2004. Only 12 of these cases, or 16%, resulted in convictions.

The majority of these are gangland killings.

Deputy Costello said that while there were just four murders in 1998 in which guns were used, this had increased dramatically to 20 in 2003 before showing a reduction to eight last year.

Mr Costello is calling for more resources to tackle gun crimes.

He said that while all murders must be treated with the utmost seriousness, “There is a particular need to ensure that those who use firearms in the course of murders are brought to justice. Those who use guns to murder and get away with it, are likely to use them again.”

The TD said gangs clearly have easy access to weapons, and “based on these figures, have little risk of being arrested and brought to justice”.

Mr Costello called on the Minister for Justice and the Garda Commissioner to review the resources available to the gardaí.

firebomb find

BBC

Six questioned over firebomb find

Four men and two women are being questioned by the police about the discovery of three firebombs at a house in County Antrim.

The devices were made safe by Army bomb experts after they were found at Fisherwick Gardens in Ballymena.

The police asked business owners in Coleraine, Strabane, Londonderry and Ballymena to thoroughly check their premises on Saturday.

They fear some devices may have already been left there.

A wave of fire bombings has destroyed several businesses across Northern Ireland in recent months.

Robert McCartney vigil

Belfast Telegraph

**from yesterday

Silent tribute to victim of city centre stabbing

By Debra Douglas
newsdesk@belfasttelegraph.co.uk
05 February 2005

SEVERAL hundred people have attended a vigil for murdered father-of-two Robert McCartney.

Mr McCartney died after being stabbed outside a city centre bar last Sunday - and last night, hundreds of people stood in silent respect for him.

Robert’s sister Paula had urged local residents to go to the vigil to register their disgust at his killing.

She was joined by the rest of the family, including Mr McCartney’s partner Bridgeen, who he was due to marry later this year.

She wept quietly as Father Sean Gilmore, from St Matthew’s Church read the Rosary.

He told the crowd, many of whom held candles, he was pleased to see so many people wanted to pay their respects to Mr McCartney.

He said: “We are here to express solidarity with Robert McCartney’s family who are going through such an ordeal.

“The people of the Short Strand are standing up against the evil that was done.”

Local MLAs and councillors also attended the vigil. Sinn Fein councillor Joe O’Donnell said it gave the local community a chance to show their support for Mr McCartney’s family.

So far seven men have been questioned and released without charge in relation to the murder, which Chief Constable Hugh Orde said was not believed to have any paramilitary involvement.

Detectives will re-visit the scene tomorrow night. Officers will speak to members of the public in May Street, which is adjacent to Magennis’s bar where Mr McCartney had been, and the surrounding area.

Leaflets will also be distributed in a bid to jog the memory of anyone who may have information about the killing that has not yet been passed on to police.

Travel to torture

Sunday Times

US agents ‘kidnapped militant’ for torture in Egypt

Stephen Grey, Milan
February 06, 2005

ITALIAN police are investigating allegations that American intelligence agents kidnapped an Islamic militant in Milan and transported him to Egypt, where he was tortured.

Osama Moustafa Nasr, an Egyptian dissident with alleged links to Al-Qaeda, disappeared in Milan on February 16, 2003, after eyewitnesses saw him being approached by three men as he walked to a mosque.

A kidnap inquiry was opened in Italy after Nasr, also known as Abu Omar, was temporarily released from custody in Egypt last year and telephoned his wife and friends to tell them what had happened.

He claimed he had been tortured so badly by secret police in Cairo that he had lost hearing in one ear. Italian officers who intercepted the call believe he has since been rearrested.

Although details of the inquiry remain confidential, the Italians are thought to be investigating claims that Nasr was taken by US intelligence agents to Aviano airbase and flown to Egypt in an American plane.

If confirmed, the case would be one of the most controversial instances of the American policy of “rendition” — sending prisoners for imprisonment and questioning in other countries. Since September 11, 2001, dozens of prisoners have been transferred by America to countries such as Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia where interrogation techniques may be harsh.

As The Sunday Times disclosed last November, US agents have repeatedly used civilian executive jets to transport prisoners to the Middle East, including a Gulfstream that was a frequent visitor to British airports. The plane was sold two days after the Sunday Times article appeared.

Imam Imad, the head of Viale Jenner mosque in Milan, an alleged centre of Islamic militancy, said Nasr had described how he tried to resist as he was stopped in the street and forced into a car before being taken to a military base.

“He can’t be sure if it was the Italians or Americans who took him,” Imad said. “He was blindfolded. But they were western people. It was certainly not the Egyptians who captured him and took him to Cairo.”

Armando Spataro, the deputy chief prosecutor of Milan, would not confirm whether there was any evidence of US involvement but said he was conducting a far-reaching inquiry. If Americans had played a part, “it would be a serious breach of Italian law”.

Spataro and other Italian prosecutors are particularly angry about Nasr’s disappearance because they were preparing to prosecute him in Milan. They had bugged a conversation that appeared to suggest he was colluding in the establishment of a new terrorist network in Europe.

The CIA and other US government departments refuse to discuss rendition publicly, except to insist that all transfers are conducted legally. Privately officials say they have guarantees that prisoners sent to other countries are well treated.

Michael Scheuer, a former senior CIA official who once played a leading role in the hunt for Osama Bin Laden, has confirmed that the agency has been involved in the rendition of close to 100 terror suspects.

The policy of “capturing people and taking them to second or third countries” was developed after the CIA was told to dismantle terrorist cells across the world, said Scheuer, who resigned last November.

Barbara Olshansky, a lawyer for the Center for Constitutional Rights in New York, said the rendition policy was a clear violation of the United Nations Convention Against Torture, which is incorporated into American law and bans the transfer of prisoners to countries where torture is likely.

Official documents released recently in Sweden revealed that the CIA provided a Gulfstream jet that took two Egyptian terrorist suspects from Sweden to Cairo in December 2001. Both claimed they were brutally tortured.

Stephen Grey presents a report on rendition on Radio 4’s File on 4 on Tuesday

The Countess - Part 2

Random Ramblings from a Republican

Part 2 of THE COUNTESS

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———————

Our Lady of Knock

marypages.com

Our Lady of Knock

Ireland, 1879

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County Mayo was in the center of a region of Ireland that had suffered great distress in the 1870’s. Various famines and economic dislocations produced by forced evictions had created yet another wave of Irish immigration. It was into this environment that the Lord again sent His Mother to visit with His oppressed children.

The Apparition at Knock took place on 21st August, 1879, eight years after Pontmain in 1871. The two apparitions are broadly similar, in that they both took place in the evening and only lasted for three hours or so, and similarly, in both, no words were spoken.

On the evening of Thursday, 21 August 1879, two women from the small village of Knock, Mary McLoughlin and Mary Beirne, were walking back to their home in the rain when they passed by the back of the town church. There against the wall of the church stood the Blessed Virgin Mary, St. Joseph, St. John the Evangelist, and an altar with a lamb and a cross on it. Flying around the altar were several angels. The women called several other people to the church. They too saw the apparition. What they and thirteen others saw in the still-bright day was a beautiful woman, clothed in white garments, wearing a large brilliant crown. Her hands were raised as if in prayer. This woman was understood by all who saw her tobe the Blessed Virgin Mary, the Mother of Jesus and the Queen of the Angels. Other villagers, who were not involved with the apparition, nonetheless reported seeing a very bright light illuminating the area around where the church was located. There were subsequent reports of inexplicable healings associated with visits to the church at Knock.

The Church response to this series of events was typically circumspect. A commission was formed to gather testimonies of those claiming to see the apparition and then a record of purported cures and devotional material was maintained until 1936. At that time, the head of the diocese of Tuam, Archbishop Gilmartin, authorized the publication of a pamphlet supporting devotion to the apparition at Knock. However, over time Knock gradually gained official support from the Church, culminating in the Papal visit of 1979. The symbolism of the lamb, cross and altar has been seen as pointing to the sacrificial death of Christ and the Mass, and yet these were behind Mary in the apparition at Knock, suggesting that the focus was on her and her role as a mediator. Knock was different from other approved apparitions in many ways. The first difference is the number of figures in the apparition. Usually, only Mary appears. The second difference is the lack of a verbal message. In all of the other apparitions, Mary appears with a request or a warning. Another difference is the large number of people that saw the apparition. Apparitions are typically seen by no more than five people. Finally, the apparition was very brief. It only occurred once, for a two hour duration. Apparitions are usually made up of multiple visitations. These differences have led some to doubt that the events at Knock ever took place.

As the news spread, pilgrims by the thousands arrived here with their sick. A large number of unusual cures were reported. Those who claimed a cure left their crutches and canes at the site, and many of those supports were attached to the wall. Pilgrims snatched plaster and bits of cement off the apparition wall for relics in 1879 and the 1880s. In the fall of 1880, a statue of Our Lady of Knock was erected where she had been seen during the vision. This place in Ireland had become a place for pilgrimage: one-and-a-half million visitors trek there annually.

This blessing upon Ireland apparently was expected because of the constant devotion to Mary that had always been exhibited on that island. St. Joseph was revered. St. John the Evangelist and the Irish people both knew love: Knock is a sign of that love. The Irish people have always understood that there is nothing divine about Our Lady; she is not God. The Blessed Virgin Mary is a human being, a sister to humankind, as well as mother. However, she is the mother of Jesus the Christ, who is divine as well as human. Therefore, Mary is the mother of God. She has no power of her own, but she is, and always will be, the mother of the most powerful person who ever walked the earth. The Blessed Virgin Mary has been assumed into heaven now to be with her Son. Sometimes she comes to earth as a heavenly messenger, sent by her Son, and she then appears to people. When the Virgin Mary speaks, she brings no new messages, nothing that is not contained in the biblical teachings of Jesus. The Virgin Mary represents Him to us, and she calls upon us to have sorrow for sin, to repent and turn to God.

The Church officially investigated the apparition at Knock in 1879, and again in 1936. It was found that the witnesses were believable and that there was nothing contrary to the faith. Four recent popes have honored Knock. Pius XII blessed the Banner of Knock at St. Peter’s and decorated it with a special medal on All Saints’ Day, 1945. It was the Marian year. On this occasion, the Pope announced the new feast of the Queenship of Mary. Pope John XXIII presented a special candle to Knock on Candlemas Day in 1960. He had always regarded it as one of outstanding shrines devoted to Our Lady. Pope Paul VI blessed the foundation stone for the Basilica of Our Lady, Queen of Ireland, on June 6, 1974. Pope John Paul II made a personel pilgrimage to the Shrine to the shrine on Sept. 30, 1979. He addressed the sick and the nursing staff, celebrated Mass, established the shrine church as a basilica, presented a candle and the golden rose to the shrine, and finally knelt in prayer at the apparition wall.

Miraculous happenings

Ten days after the first apparition, the first cure occurred. A young girl, born deaf, was instantly given the gift of hearing. At the end of 1880, some 300 cures, apparently miraculous, had been recorded in the diary of the parish priest. One of the pilgrims, who had been cured soon after the apparition, testified many years later that he had seen “as many as half-a-dozen pilgrims simultaneously undergoing their cure, or getting relief, and in vision I see the lame walk, my case included, the sightless seeing, the withered skins expanding.” May Mary, Mother of the Lord, woman of the Magnificat, who identified herself with the anawim of this world, obtain for us courage to challenge the mighty and to put ourselves at the service of her Son and His kingdom of justice, peace and love. May we always pray:

Lord, open my eyes that I may see. Give me strength that I may act

“This apparition is fully approved by the Holy See: 1936″

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Thirty-eight years later, in 1917, the Blessed Virgin appears again, this time in Fatima (Portugal)

Adams’ IRA role

Sunday Independent

New evidence describes Adams’ IRA role

WILLIE KEALY and
ALAN MURRAY

New documentary evidence released from the British Public Record Office under the 30-year rule, describes Gerry Adams as a prominent leader of bombing and shooting campaigns.

Mr Adams has always denied that he was ever a member of the IRA despite the fact that he twice represented that organisation in talks with representatives of the British government. His presence in London as part of an IRA delegation on June 26, 1972, when he had been let out of the Maze Prison to help negotiate a ceasefire, has been well documented.

It has also been reported that he had attended a similar meeting at Ballyarnett on the Derry/Donegal border six days earlier. But now the official notes of the Ballyarnett meeting, made by PJ Woodfield, representing the then Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, William Whitelaw, have been published.

According to Mr Woodfield’s notes, the meeting took place on June 20, 1972, at the house of a Col and Mrs McCorkell, who were in the house at the time.

“The IRA representatives were Mr David O’Connell and Mr Gerard Adams,” the note says.

The IRA representatives were accompanied by “a third person, a Mr PJ McGrory who was described as a solicitor and a wholly independent person”. Mr McGrory’s function was to scrutinise the credentials of Mr Woodfield and another official, Mr Frank Steele, after which he withdrew. The IRA were offering a ceasefire in return for guarantees of political status for certain convicted prisoners, non harassment of IRA members during a ceasefire, agreement that IRA members could continue to carry sidarms for their own protection and a personal meeting with Mr Whitelaw.

The meeting with Mr Whitelaw was agreed to and it was also agreed that “raids, searches and arrests to look for people wanted for their past activities would not take place” during a ceasefire.

Mr Woodfield records that he told the two IRA representatives that the British government “had already made certain arrangements which were sufficiently satisfactory to the prisoners themselves for them to have called off their hunger strike.” The IRA representatives did not seem to know this and asked to speak by phone to a prisoner, but were told they could not as this would jeopardise the secrecy of the meeting.

On the question of personal firearms, Mr Woodfield said he would have to report back on this but “the object was to produce a situation as soon as possible when people no longer thought they needed to carry firearms and that if persons were going about on normal peaceful business they would not be subject to arbitrary stopping and searching.”

The talks lasted for five and a half hours and towards the end when matters were less formal, “the IRA asked if the NI Office would be prepared to use their good offices to introduce them to representatives of the UDA. They clearly recognised the UDA as a potentially dangerous power centre in Northern Ireland and implied that if a meeting could be effected they might get along better than some people might expect.”

The British representatives also raised some further points. They suggested that pre-set timer bombs could scupper a ceasefire if they accidentally went off and killed British soldiers after the ceasefire had been declared. Mr O’Connell and Mr Adams appeared not to know “whether or not they had any such time bombs”.

On the exact timing of the ceasefire, Mr O’Connell replied that he and Mr Adams were “not potentates” and would have to refer back and that they would need some time to give advance warning down the line.

Finally Mr O’Connell was asked about the size and composition of the IRA delegation that would meet Mr Whitelaw. “He bristled a little and said that they would not accept any dictation on this point.” Mr Woodfield said it would be better not to include persons who were “well known persons and faces; in particular it would make it much easier if Mr MacStiofain was not included.”

This detailed note corroborates for the first time an account previously given by the other British official at the meeting, Mr Frank Steele.

In a chapter of his book setting out the context of the IRA’s 1972 ceasefire BBC journalist Peter Taylor details an interview with Mr Steele.

Taylor records that on June 20, 1972, Whitelaw granted Republicans and Loyalists held in Long Kesh ’special category status’ and that Frank Steele and a senior NIO official Philip Woodfield made their way to a secret rendezvous just outside Derry to meet Provisional IRA representatives to discuss the mechanisms of a ceasefire.

“After a few map-reading errors, they finally found the house, where they waited for Gerry Adams and David O’Connell. As Steele understood it, Adams was representing the IRA in the North and O’Connell the IRA in the South,” Taylor wrote.

In the interview Steele says “It was all rather sweet, really. They wanted to depict themselves as representing an army and not a bunch of terrorists. So we all had to have letters of authority. They had them and we all had them signed by a Minister or by Willie [Whitelaw]. I thought at the time it was simply ridiculous. I mean what on earth else were the four of us doing there. We hadn’t just wandered in off the street to chat. We’re obviously representing HMG and the IRA.”

Taylor says that Steele “had been briefed that the young Gerry Adams had been an effective Commander of the Provisionals’ Ballymurphy Battalion and was a senior officer of the Belfast Brigade. He was therefore expecting to meet ‘an arrogant, streetwise young thug’ and was surprised when Adams turned out to be ‘a very personable, intelligent, articulate and self-disciplined man’. Steele believed that these were the qualities that made him so dangerously effective”.

Steele in his own words said, “Gerry Adams obviously had a terrific future ahead of him whatever he did because of his qualities. As we were about to leave, I said, ‘you don’t want to spend the rest of your life on the run from us British. What do you want to do?’ He said, ‘I want to go to university and get a degree’. I said, ‘well we’re not stopping you, all you’ve got to do is to renounce violence and you can go to university and get a degree’. He grinned and said, ‘no, I’ve got to get rid of you British first’.”

In his notes of the meeting, Mr Woodfield said: “Their [Adams and O’Connell] appearance and manner were respectable and respectful - they easily referred to Mr Whitelaw as the ‘Secretary of State’ and they addressed me from time to time as ‘Sir’. They made no bombastic defence of their past and made no attacks on the British government, the British army or any other communities or bodies in Northern Ireland. Their response to every argument put to them was reasonable and moderate. Their behaviour and attitude appeared to bear no relation to the indiscriminate campaigns of bombings and shooting in which they have both been prominent leaders.”

Six days later on June 26, 1972, within hours of the IRA’s ceasefire coming into operation an IRA delegation attended a secret meeting with the British Government at a Minister’s home in Cheyne Walk in Chelsea.

Frank Steele collected six members of the IRA north west of Derry - including Sean MacStiofain the organisation’s Chief of Staff and Gerry Adams, David O’Connell, Seamus Twomey, Ivor Bell and Martin McGuinness.

McStiofain told Peter Taylor that all six men were members of the IRA.

The six were driven by Steele to RAF Aldergrove outside Belfast and flown to RAF Benson to the west of London and were driven to the Chelsea location in two Special Branch cars. Dublin solicitor Myles Shevlin the Provisionals’ ‘legal adviser’, who also attended, took notes of the meeting.

Adams failed to return to Long Kesh as agreed with the British and remained at large in Belfast until July 19, 1973, when he was arrested in a major security swoop which netted 17 Provisionals.

Adams remained in Long Kesh until February 1977 when he was released as internment was ended by the then Secretary of State Merlyn Rees and the old compounds were emptied. In February the following year he was re-arrested in West Belfast and charged with IRA membership. The Security Services at that time believed the Sinn Fein President had succeeded Seamus Twomey as the IRA’s Chief of Staff. By autumn 1978 he had been released when the charge was dismissed by the Lord Chief Justice of Northern Ireland, Lord Lowry.

Between 1975 and his release from internment in February 1977 Adams is believed to have penned articles in Republican News under the pseudonym ‘Brownie’. These articles are credited with creating the base for the IRA’s strategic thinking for the following two decades.

In one article published in 1976 ‘Brownie’ infamously wrote, “Rightly or wrongly, I am an IRA Volunteer and, rightly or wrongly, I take a course of action as a means to bringing about a situation in which I believe the people of my country will prosper.”

mobile hacking

Sunday Independent

Armalite phone prank causes politician a handful of strife

LARA BRADLEY

“I CAN’T take your call right now, I’ve an Armalite in one hand and a ballot box in the other,” was not the undiplomatic message Sinn Fein’s Larry O’Toole intended to leave on his voice mail.

But when his mobile phone was hacked into last week, a prankster set up a new greeting for the Dublin city councillor. The sinister result with its IRA overtones shocked both Cllr O’Toole and the people trying to call him.

“This is Cllr Larry O’Toole here, sorry I can’t take your call right now. I’ve an Armalite in one hand and a ballot box in the other. Please leave your message after the tone,” the voice message said.

The Artane representative said: “I was horrified to discover that someone was able to record a totally inappropriate and insulting answer message on my O2 mobile phone.

“This caused me stress and indeed embarrassment. I had to phone back people who could not reach me and apologise for any distress caused and try to explain whathappened.

“Apparently anyone can access another person’s message box by using some formula or another. I will be asking my mobile phone company to investigate this matter,” he told the Northside People newspaper.

Cllr O’Toole is not the only person to have been targeted in this way. A Sunday Independent reader said she had her Vodafone voice mail replaced by a man’s voice.

“He was a real Dub, saying ‘Howaya, I’m not here, eh, leave a message’. It was only that a friend tried to call me and kept getting this strange voice or I would never have found out,” she said.

“I have no idea who the man was or how his voice came to be on my mobile phone.

“When I called Vodafone, I was told that it is possible to access other people’s voice-mail greeting, even from a land line. It could be that someone with a number similar to yours can mistakenly set up their message on your phone but until it happened to me, I did not realise that this was possible,” she said.

A spokeswoman for 02 said mobile phone users must set a personal PIN number to bar hackers from their voice mail service.

She explained that by dialing 5 after the 087, 086 or 085 prefix and before the rest of the number, people could access that telephone’s voice mail directly.

The code for all new phones to hear voice mail or to set a message was 0000, which should be changed immediately to ensure privacy.

“It is a security feature of all mobile phones across all networks that there is a four-digit PIN code for voice mail. If you want to access your voice mail from a land line or abroad, for example, you dial in and then key in your PIN number,” the spokeswoman said.

“The need to set your own number is very, very strongly flagged when you buy any new phone, and when you first dial 171 for voice mail it asks if you want to change the code. People absolutely must do that to ensure privacy.”

She said Cllr O’Toole’s hacker had inadvertently highlighted the need to set such a number, and that mobile phone PIN numbers should be guarded as closely as those for ATM cards.

Israelis murder another child

Aljazeera.Net

Killing of Palestinian girl shatters family

By Laila El-Haddad in Gaza
Friday 04 February 2005
16:05 Makka Time, 13:05 GMT

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When Nuran died, a part of me died also, her mother said

Ten-year-old Nuran Iyad Dib went to school as ecstatic as any schoolgirl should be. But this crisp winter day was special: she would receive her bi-annual report card.

As it turned out, she passed with flying colours, which meant a gift from her parents, who had been saving up their dwindling funds for this occasion. The teacher’s comment on top of her report read: We predict a very bright future for Nuran.

But Nuran would have no such future, and her gift lies abandoned in a corner of her family’s grieving home. On the afternoon of 31 January 2005, Israeli sniper fire ripped through her face as she stood in her school’s courtyard, lining up for afternoon assembly.

The last thing Nuran’s mother remembers of her daughter before she left for school that morning was hearing her say her morning prayers, during which she recited a verse about God having created death - and life - as a test for mankind.

In retrospect, Nuran’s mother believes it was a premonition of what was to come.

“Then she left for school. She was a completely selfless child. She was thinking of her sisters till the last second. She came back after she had left the house, and said: ‘Mommy, it’s cold - please put some sweaters on my sisters before they leave’,” her mother said.

“What more can I say except that she was a breath of fresh air in these hard times? Her name was Nur [light] and that’s exactly what she was.”

Her death has many here questioning Israel’s commitment to a ceasefire amid a one-sided truce and virtual period of calm.

“We extended an olive branch to them and instead of reciprocating they cut our hand off,” Nuran’s mother cried, sitting in an unpainted cement-block bedroom with nothing but thin foam mattresses on the ground.

“What did she ever do to deserve such a fate? Or her sister, who saw Nura die in front of her? Every night she wails out in her sleep: ‘Bring me my sister, bring me my sister’”.

Fifth child killed

But Nuran was not the first innocent Palestinian child to meet such a violent death in occupied Gaza. In fact, she was the fifth to be shot dead or maimed by Israeli occupation forces while on the premises of their UN-flagged schools in the past two years.

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Nuran was standing in assembly when a bullet struck her face

Two girls were killed in separate incidents in Rafah and Khan Yunus last year while sitting at their desks, and a little girl was permanently blinded in March 2003.

According to UNRWA’s spokesperson, Paul McCann, the UN relief organisation has repeatedly protested against the Israeli military’s indiscriminate firing into civilian areas in the occupied Palestinian territory.

Nuran’s school, which is about 600m away from the border, has been hit on numerous occasions since the start of the conflict, he said. This is the first time the shots have had tragic consequences.

“We want to ask the world: Was Nuran holding an explosive belt around her waist? Was she toting a Kalashnikov? She knew no politics, only love,” her aunt Iktimal Husayn asked rhetorically.

“She was supposed to bring home her report from school, but instead she brought home her death certificate.”

Nuran’s mother says minutes before receiving news of her daughter’s death she sensed something was not right.

“I asked her father about a beautiful picture of Nuran we had taken a few years back. I wanted to see it. And then her baby sister dropped a large jar of chilli sauce on the floor.”

Israeli denials

Witnesses say the children were clapping their hands and singing the national anthem when the firing started.

One bullet pierced the hand of Aysha Isam al-Khatib, while the other hit Nuran in the head. She fell to the ground at once.

Bystanders say they assumed she was unconscious until they noticed the pool of blood beneath her shattered skull.

A third bullet hit a young girl’s book bag, and was stopped in its tracks by one of her folders, only a few excruciating centimetres away from her spine.

Eleven-year-old Salwa al-Khalifa was next to Nuran when the bullets struck. She described with disturbing composure well beyond her years the details of that bloody hour.

“A bullet went in through her nose and came out of her neck. We all ducked. Several other bullets hit the window and school wall over there.”

A day after the incident, Israeli authorities said their initial investigation indicated it was fire from jubilant Palestinian police celebrating the return of Hajj pilgrims, not Israeli sniper fire, that killed Nuran.

Pockmarked walls

But the pockmarked wall of the UNRWA school, which stands 600m away from an Israeli sniper tower and far away from residential blocks, tells a different story.

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School counsellors provided therapy to Nuran’s classmates

“There is nothing around us here, and there were no pilgrims that we know of celebrating that day. There is just an outpost a few hundred metres away - one from which sniper fire has frequently hit our school,” school principal Siham al-Ghoff said.

Al-Ghoff says if the fire was indeed Palestinian, the bullet would not have hit Nuran in the face but rather landed on top of her head, as rifles fired in celebration usually point upwards.

Both Palestinian security sources and UN officials confirm the account, saying that the way the bullets were scattered, along with witness testimonies, point to Israeli gunfire.

“Everything is pointing to the fact that it was the Israelis. There were a number of shots, and the way they were scattered gives us an indication of the direction where they came from, and that corresponds with witness reports that the firing came from an [Israeli] APC or tank in the area,” one official said.

School goes on

Meanwhile, in Nuran’s school, life goes on. Girls who received top marks this term were rewarded with tins of toffee that they passed out enthusiastically to all visitors, a step taken by school counsellors to attempt to normalise an abnormal situation.

But in Nuran’s fourth-grade classroom, the mood was far from celebratory.

“The children are too afraid to go out for their recess, and many simply go to the bathroom and weep all day,” principal al-Ghoff said.

Counsellors have been trying to help the children work through the trauma of recent days. When asked to portray their conception of their classmate’s death, most drew tanks and Apache helicopters invading their school.

“I thought there’s a truce now, something like this would never happen. Now we’re trying to pick up the pieces,” al-Ghoff added.

Shattered lives

The Palestinian Authority has filed a formal complaint with the Israeli side about the girls’ shooting, but it is unlikely Nuran’s family will ever get answers about their daughter’s death.

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Nuran had asked for sweaters for her sisters before she was killed

Back in her family’s home, Nuran’s mother sat gazing in disbelief at her daughter’s report card, while her father Iyad stood weeping silently.

Nearby, an Israeli tank shell rattled the windows of the room, which together with young Nuran’s death served as a reminder that if there is any calm it has not yet reached Rafah.

“When Nuran died, a part of me died also,” her mother said.

“She was a bright light that was extinguished. For me, there can be no more peace.”

Aljazeera

Security in the North on alert

The Observer

Security tightened as IRA warns of crisis

Henry McDonald, Ireland editor
Sunday February 6, 2005
The Observer

Security at ports and airports as well as military and police bases in Northern Ireland has been strengthened following IRA statements last week warning the British and Irish governments about a crisis in the peace process.

Special Branch officers have reappeared at entry points from Ireland into Britain in recent days. Anti-terrorist officers have contacted agents who worked for the security forces inside the IRA. The informers living in hiding have been warned to step up their personal security.

Surveillance of republican suspects on either side of the Irish border has also been intensified as London and Dublin try to determine if the IRA’s implicit threat contained in the two statements will be backed up with force.

Last Thursday the IRA withdrew last December’s offer to decommission vast amounts of arms as well as tonnes of Semtex explosive in order to boost a deal that would see Gerry Adams sitting down in government with Democratic Unionist leader the Reverend Ian Paisley.

Since that deal broke down the atmosphere in Northern Ireland has been toxic. On 22 December an elite IRA unit is believed to have carried out the largest bank heist in European history. The theft of an estimated £26 million from the Northern Bank led to the fresh crisis in the peace process, which is set to deepen later this week when the international body set up to assess the state of paramilitary cease-fires publishes its next report.

The Independent Monitoring Commission is expected to concur with Chief Constable Hugh Orde’s judgment that the IRA was behind the heist in Belfast.

Security chiefs fear that an IMC recommendation of financial or political sanctions against Sinn Fein over the Northern Bank robbery might act as a ‘tipping point’.

A security briefing given to Irish leader Bertie Ahern said the robbery was a ‘bloodless spectacular’, an alternative to bombing Britain.

Ahern was told that after the political talks failed, a minority in the IRA leadership believed the British should have been taught a lesson, The Observer has learned. Instead of bombing Britain, potentially a political disaster in the post-9/11 world, the movement chose instead to pull off the biggest cash theft ever.

The IRA’s former southern commander turned informer Sean O’Callaghan said yesterday: ‘We are entering a new phase of the struggle, a post-peace process world, that they are thinking post-Blair and the implications of his departure from the scene’.

‘I don’t think they are going back to outright war but rather will adopt a policy of destabilisation in Northern Ireland. The IRA cannot afford to allow Northern Ireland under direct rule from London to be stable and prosperous. At the same time they cannot go back to bombing Britain because that puts them in the same camp as Bin Laden. But they may consider a policy of street disorder, winding things up in the loyalist marching season.’

The police have been less alarmist about the implications of the IRA’s two statements. ‘There is no imminent threat of the IRA going back to what they call “war”,’ Hugh Orde said this weekend.

Yesterday Gerry Adams insisted he did not want to see war return, although earlier the Sinn Fein leader pointedly refused to interpret what those IRA statements meant.






















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