SAOIRSE32

23/3/2005

Breen and Buchanan tribunal

RTE News

New tribunal to examine RUC deaths

23 March 2005 20:09

A tribunal of inquiry is to be set up into the killing of RUC Chief Superintendent Harry Breen and RUC Superintendent Robert Buchanan 16 years ago.

The motion to establish the tribunal was brought before the Dáil by the Minister for Justice, Michael McDowell, this morning.

The two senior officers were shot dead in March 1989 at an IRA checkpoint near Jonesborough in Co Armagh, as they returned from a security meeting with gardaí in Dundalk, Co Louth.

Canadian Judge Peter Cory, who was appointed to investigate allegations of collusion between Irish and British security forces and paramilitaries in Northern Ireland, recommended that an inquiry be held into the deaths of the two men.

The Minister for Justice ‘challenged’ Sinn Féin and members of the IRA to co-operate with the tribunal. He said neither group could clamour for justice and truth in other cases and not co-operate with this one.

He added that those contributing to the tribunal will be in the unique position to give evidence without the fear of incrimination.

‘totally committed’

BreakingNews.ie

**Big fish from little fish grow–anyone else think this smells funny?

Ex-policeman standing for Sinn Féin

23/03/2005 - 18:14:04

Sinn Féin has selected a former police officer to stand in the next Westminster elections, it emerged tonight.

Billy Leonard, who defected to the republican party from the SDLP, will contest the East Derry seat.

Sinn Féin colleague Francie Brolly claimed Mr Leonard was an ideal candidate after offering “inspirational” leadership as a councillor in Coleraine.

Mr Brolly, an East Derry MLA, said: “He is totally committed to all the one-Ireland issues such as tourism, the environment, equality and the promotion of the Irish language and culture.

“He works tirelessly in advancing the peace process, on the street at grass-root level where it really matters.”

Mr Leonard, a former Protestant lay preacher and police reservist, caused shock when he switched allegiance in January last year, citing the SDLP’s general lack of direction.

He became the first Sinn Féin member of Coleraine Borough Council.

Meanwhile, the Ulster Unionists have chosen the chairman of their Westminster association to challenge the Rev Ian Paisley’s seat in the general election.

Rodney McCune, 28, from Ballymena, will be the UUP’s youngest candidate when he stands in North Antrim.

Mr McCune said: “I know that I will have a very difficult fight on my hands but I am sure that my opponents will feel the same way.”

Atrocities every day

The Blanket

Democratic Killers

Fred A Wilcox • 21 March 2005

Robert McCartney’s sisters and his fiancé are obviously deeply caring human beings that are determined to bring his killers to justice. Could anyone find fault with that? I’m absolutely certain that if someone harmed one of my children, I would never rest until the perpetrator paid for his crime. I would hope that, given my belief in nonviolence, I could avoid seeking revenge. But who knows what anyone will do when their heart is broken by the loss of someone they love.

So, while I understand why the McCartney family might accept George W. Bush’s invitation to visit the White House on St. Patrick’s Day, 2005, it made me sad to see these good people enter the house where torture, assassinations, murder, preemptive wars, and other atrocities are plotted every single day…

>>>Read on

—————–

Full Text of IRA Easter Statement 2005

Daily Ireland

Full Text of IRA Easter Statement 2005

Murder labelled ‘wrong … a crime’

The IRA has accused its opponents of hypocrisy in attacking its efforts to help bring the murderers of Robert McCartney to justice.
In its traditional Easter statement, it says “justifiable resentment” among republicans at efforts to crimalise the IRA should not cloud the issue.
“The killing of Robert McCartney…was wrong,” says the statement.

The full Easter statement reads:

On this, the 89th anniversary of the Easter Rising of 1916, we remember the men and women of every generation who have given their lives in the struggle for Irish freedom.
The leadership of Óglaigh na hÉireann extends solidarity to the families of our comrades who have fallen during this phase of the struggle. We remember those comrades with honour and pride. We send solidarity to our Volunteers and to our friends and supporters at home and abroad.
We think of our imprisoned comrades and their families at this time also.
Over ten years ago, the leadership of the IRA declared a complete cessation of military operations. We did so to enhance the development of the Irish Peace process.
From then until now we have, on a number of occasions, demonstrated our continuing support for this process.
At times of significant crisis or political impasse, we have taken initiatives to move the situation forward.
Our approach has been premised on the belief that the achievement of a just and lasting peace requires constant forward momentum in the Peace Process.
For the past two years, the Peace Process has been locked in stalemate and has slipped backwards into deepening crisis.
During that period, specifically in October 2003 and in December 2004, we agreed to significant initiatives as part of an agreement to break the logjam. On each occasion, other parties reneged on their commitments.
An unprecedented opportunity to transform the situation on the island of Ireland was thrown away by rejectionist unionism, aided and abetted by the two governments.
The DUP attempted to turn the initiative of December 2004 into a humiliation of the IRA. The concerted efforts of both governments since then to undermine the integrity of our cause, by seeking
to criminalise the republican struggle, is clear evidence that our opponents remain fixated with the objective of defeating republicans rather than developing the Peace Process.
The sustained campaign directed against the republican people over recent months is nothing new. We have seen and heard it all before. Those who opted to follow the Thatcher path will not succeed. Our patriot dead are not criminals. We are not criminals.
Republican men and women suffered deprivation and torture to defeat attempts to criminalise our struggle. Ten of our comrades endured the agony of hunger strike and died defeating the criminalisation strategy.
We will not betray their courage by tolerating criminality within our own ranks. We will not allow our opponents to further their own petty self-interests by levelling false allegations against Óglaigh na hÉireann.
The IRA has spelt out its position in relation to the killing of Robert McCartney. It was wrong, it was murder, it was a crime. But it was not carried out by the IRA, nor was it carried out on behalf of the IRA.
The IRA moved quickly to deal with those involved. We have tried to assist in whatever way we can.
Unfortunately, it would appear that no matter what we do it will never be enough for some. Those in the political and media establishments who have been so quick to jump on the bandwagon have again laid bare their own hypocrisy.
This causes justifiable resentment among republicans. But it must not cloud the issue. Óglaigh na hÉireann expects the highest standards of conduct from our Volunteers. Struggle requires sacrifice and discipline. It promises hardship and suffering. Our fallen comrades rose to those challenges and met them head on.
The discipline and commitment of our Volunteers and the wider republican base have been the backbone of our struggle. In these testing times, that steadfastness and determination are needed more and more.
We salute you and urge you to remain strong and united. The crisis in the Peace Process and the reinvigorated attempts to criminalise us have not diminished in any way our determination to pursue and achieve our republican objectives.
Irish unity and independence provides the best context for the people of this island to live together in harmony.
The primary responsibility now rests with the two governments. They must demonstrate their commitment to a lasting peace. Pandering to the demands of those who are opposed change is not the way forward.

P O’Neill

No PSNI exchange

Belfast Telegraph

Gardai warned against serving in Ulster

By Kim Kelly
23 March 2005

Police inspectors and sergeants in the Republic have been advised not to participate in an historic cross-border scheme which allows gardai to serve in Northern Ireland.

At the annual conference of the Association of Garda Sergeants and Inspectors concerns over the safety of police officers were raised.

AGSI president Joe Dirwan said he was concerned about security threats to Garda officers who participated in exchanges with the PSNI.

The association said it had advised sergeants and inspectors, who were in Kilkenny yesterday for the conference, not to participate in the scheme.

“When members move northwards their protection and their security has to be looked after and likewise when they move from north to south. This is as serious issue that needs to be addressed,” he said.

The AGSI said it is withdrawing co-operation from the historic protocol which was signed last month by Garda Commissioner Noel Conroy and PSNI Chief Constable Hugh Orde.

Mr Dirwan said there had not been a satisfactory agreement on pay for those participating in the scheme.

It is understood that no member of the Garda or the PSNI has yet been seconded to either force.

But Mr Conroy said he fully supported the cross-border exchange programme and added that he had raised the issue of safety with Mr Orde.

“I’m satisfied that he or I have no information or intelligence that any of our members would be endangered from serving in Northern Ireland,” he said.

The agreement, which was the result of a proposal in the Patten Report in 1999, was signed at Hillsborough Castle in February.

It marked unprecedented cooperation between the two police forces and allowed officers from one force to be seconded to the other for up to three years.

Wholesale Slaughter

Telegraph

Tourists flee park elephants slaughter

(Filed: 23/03/2005)


‘Indications are that the country’s game is being plundered’

‘Famine relief’ may conceal poaching ring backed by the Mugabe regime, reports Christopher Munnion

Horrified tourists have fled from Zimbabwe’s largest game reserve after witnessing the “wholesale slaughter” of animals, part of what conservation groups fear is an officially sanctioned poaching ring.

‘Indications are that the country’s game is being plundered’

Operation Nyama, or “Operation Meat”, is ostensibly a campaign to feed starving villagers in northern Matabeleland.

But independent observers say it is a cover for corruption and ivory smuggling approved by President Robert Mugabe’s regime.

“If the aim was to feed the people, it is strange that most of the elephant bulls that are being shot have 60lb to 70lb tusks and are in their prime,” said Johnny Rodrigues, the chairman of the Zimbabwean Conservation Task Force.

“Older bulls with broken tusks are not being targeted.”

Operation Nyama, carried out in Hwange national park, was supposed to end in December, he said.

“But three weeks ago we received a report from a group of disgusted American tourists. They saw a national parks truck which had broken down inside Hwange and was fully loaded with dead impala and buffalo.

“An attempt had been made to conceal the dead animals with branches and leaves but the Americans could easily see what was in the truck.”

Two Australian tourists also cut short their visit to Hwange park after hearing automatic gunfire day and night.

The couple also passed an official truck loaded with the carcasses of dead wild animals.

“They were terrified and said it was like being in a war zone,” said a conservationist who met the couple as they fled to South Africa.

“They said that, if they had wanted to see dead animals, they could have visited their local abattoir.

“It has now reached the point where the wildlife is probably safer outside the national park areas because the people who have been entrusted with safeguarding this precious commodity are the very people who are destroying it,” Mr Rodrigues said.

The reports of the bloodbath in Hwange coincided with news of an illegal shipment of African elephant body parts recently seized by Dutch customs officials at Amsterdam airport.

The cargo included 22 feet, eight tusks, eight ears, three tails, a skull and an entire hide.

The shipment, which did not have the proper licences, originated in Zimbabwe and was bound for Germany.

A former senior wildlife officer forced to flee Zimbabwe when he threatened to expose poaching rings organised by park wardens said he was not surprised by the reports from Hwange. “It follows a pattern that has been established throughout Zimbabwe in national parks, hunting concession areas and private wildlife reserves,” he said.

“All the indications are that the country’s game is being plundered and exploited with the connivance and encouragement of senior officials at a regional level and probably at a central government level as well.

“Trying to prove it is a different matter as all these officials are senior members of the ruling Zanu-PF party and all those who know something are too frightened to talk about it.”

According to Mr Rodrigues, a camp manager in Hwange threatened to remove his diesel engines from the park because there was little point in spending millions of dollars on fuel to pump water to attract game just so it could be shot for meat.

One of the wardens at Main Camp had been arrested for stealing 18 diesel pumps, most of them donated by conservation organisations, and selling them to the “new farmers” now hunting in areas adjoining the park.

“The Zimbabwean government spends millions of dollars promoting tourism while the national parks staff seem to be making a good job of destroying it,” Mr Rodrigues said

Richard O’Rawe

The Blanket

**via IRA2

A Must Read

To fully appreciate the controversary surrounding the book, it must be read

BLANKETMEN
An Untold Story of the H-Block Hunger Strike
RICHARD O’RAWE, New Island Press

Book Review

Mick Hall • 18 March 2005

I once asked a former member of the British Army Intelligence Corp if there was any substance in the British Government’s fears if they announced their withdrawal from the Six Counties the Loyalist Paramilitary’s would conduct an OAS* type campaign in England. He replied he could not see this happening, as the Loyalist terror groups, the UDA, LVF and the UVF, unlike the Provisional Irish Republican Army, simply did not have the stamina necessary to conduct a bombing campaign on the British mainland. The book Blanketmen, An Untold Story of the H-block Hunger Strike written by former Blanketman Richard O’Rawe, more than adequately answers the question what gave the Provos such tenacious stamina to fight a thirty odd year war against not only one of the world’s major military powers, but also the most experienced army in combating insurgencies…

>>>Read on

McCartney plea

IRA2

McCartney sister issues emotional plea for help

Irish Independent
23 Mar 2005

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us

A SISTER of Robert McCartney, who was stabbed to death several weeks
ago, has issued an impassioned plea for anyone with information that
would help to convict his killers to come forward. “I would say to
people if it hadn’t been Robert, it would certainly have been someone
else. Someone else’s son, brother, husband or father. Unfortunately,
it just happened to be my brother. And who’s next,” said Paula
McCartney.

“You know, Robert did not die an easy death. He was beaten and then
stabbed and then beaten again. He didn’t die until another eight
hours later in hospital. It was a long and brutal death that should
not have happened,” she added.

Her parents, she said, were finding it “very hard” to come to terms
with what happened to 33-year-old Robert, who was stabbed to death by
republicans after there was a row in Magennis’s bar in Belfast’s city
centre on January 30 last.

Meanwhile, the family are planning to hold a rally outside the bar
where Robert was stabbed on Sunday, April 3 at 3pm.

Louise McCall

Belfast library cuts

Sinn Féin

Mass Sinn Féin resignation from Belfast Education Library Board

Published: 22 March, 2005

Sinn Féin West Belfast councillor Tom Hartley along with Cllr Danny Lavery, Cllr Gerard O’Neill and Deputy Mayor Cllr Joe O’Donnell have all resigned from the Belfast Education Library Board in opposition to cuts of £7 million.

Speaking after the special meeting of the BELB today Cllr Hartley said:

“Sinn Féin are totally opposed to the £7 million cuts to frontline services on the BELB that will impact on catering, maintenance, transport and the special educational needs services. The most vulnerable children and young people will suffer.

“Sinn Féin will not stand over these cuts. They are the responsibility of Barry Gardiner.

“These are not one off cuts. There will be year on year cuts over the next number of years that will totally decimate vital services in the BELB area.” ENDS

‘We are not criminals’

Reuters.co.uk

IRA says: “We are not criminals”
Wed Mar 23, 2005 7:16 AM GMT

By Jodie Ginsberg

DUBLIN (Reuters) - The IRA insists it is not a criminal gang after intense pressure over a brutal stabbing from Washington, London and Dublin leaders and from within its Northern Irish heartlands.

“We are not criminals,” the outlawed paramilitary organisation said in its traditional Easter message on Wednesday. “Republican men and women suffered deprivation and torture to defeat attempts to criminalise our struggle … We will not betray their courage by tolerating criminality within our own ranks.”

The IRA, which fought a bloody campaign until a 1997 ceasefire, and its political ally Sinn Fein are facing rare local criticism over accusations of criminal links after a man was stabbed to death in a bar brawl in January by a gang that included IRA members.

The sisters and fiancee of 33-year-old victim Robert McCartney took their campaign for justice to Washington last week, where they met President George W. Bush.

U.S. lawmakers called for the IRA to disband and condemned Sinn Fein’s links to the organisation.

“The IRA has spelt out its position in relation to the killing of Robert McCartney. It was wrong, it was murder, it was a crime,” the IRA said in a statement signed “P O’Neill”, the name traditionally used in IRA communiques.

“But it was not carried out by the IRA, nor was it carried out on behalf of the IRA,” it added.

The IRA, which expelled three members over the death, has said it was prepared to shoot those involved but the family want justice in court. They say that despite the organisation’s calls for people to come forward, it is still intimidating witnesses.

So far no one has been arrested for the murder even though around 70 people are thought to have been in the bar on the night of McCartney’s death.

The IRA, which does not recognise the authority of the mainly Protestant police force in Northern Ireland, recommended witnesses make statements to solicitors. The Police Ombudsman has also offered to take statements and pass them on to police.

“The IRA moved quickly to deal with those involved. We have tried to assist in whatever way we can. Unfortunately, it would appear that no matter what we do it will never be enough for some,” the group said.

Northern Ireland’s Good Friday Agreement, signed almost seven years ago, largely drew a line under the three decades of violence that claimed some 3,600 lives in the province.

But efforts to revive a government in which Protestants and Catholics share the running of local affairs are at an impasse. London and Dublin say IRA crime is hampering progress.

Common culture

Unison.ie / Irish Independent

Protestants and Catholics here ‘are creating common culture’

CATHOLICS and Protestants, North and South, are closer to each other in their views on many issues than either are to any other European population, an ESRI study reveals.

In an increasingly secular Europe, shared views on issues such as abortion and homosexuality are creating a “common culture” on the island, according to a major new study.

In both parts of the island people are also quite positive about the political system - in spite of the North’s political problems and the corruption scandals in the Republic.

They also tend to be in agreement on key questions relating to the family and sexual morality.

Abortion has the lowest level of approval among people living on the island of Ireland than in any other EU country except Malta.

The populations of both parts of Ireland also tend to dissapprove more strongly than nearly all other European nations of premeditated single parenthood.

And compared with the rest of Europe, Protestants and Catholics on both sides of the Border are similar in the importance they accord to religion.

A key finding of the study, ‘Conflict and Consensus - A Study of Values and Attitudes in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland’, is that while religion is still a source of deep division, it is also a major source of cultural similarity all over Ireland.

The study - produced by Tony Fahey, Bernadette C Hayes and Richard Sinnott - is based on a wide range of surveys from the 1970s to 2003, focusing especially on 1999-2000.

“While neither Catholics nor Protestants in the North or in the Republic are as attached to their churches as they once were, they are alike in continuing to subscribe to organised religion and orthodox Christian belief to a greater degree than the populations of most other European societies,” it concludes.

“Religion may constitute a line of division in one way but in another it twins the two traditions as a relatively religious pair in an increasingly secular Europe.”

The study notes dramatic falls in church attendance among adults to as low as 50pc in the Republic and 42pc in the North, but adds that the “continuing vitality” of religion here stands out in a European context.

The authors also find evidence to challenge an assumption that sex scandals, child abuse revelations and the materialism associated with wealth might have caused Catholicism to have declined in comparison to Protestantism.

“In fact, Catholicism in both parts of Ireland has held up at least as well as, and in some respects slightly better, than Protestantism in Northern Ireland,” they conclude.

Only one indicator - confidence in the church - shows the Catholic church in both the Republic and the North to be in a weaker position than the Protestant churches.

Ben Quinn

George Harrison, Kilkelly man

westernpeople.ie

The rebel with a cause…

By: Marion Harrison
Wednesday, February 23, 2005

With the IRA’s commitment to the Northern Ireland Peace Process under intense scrutiny, Marian Harrison traces the extraordinary life of the Mayo-born gun-runner, George Harrison, who died in the US last year.

Overlooking Shammer Lake sits a decrepit, deserted cottage, steeped in IRA history. The roof of the Harrison homestead has fallen in, the windows are rotten but inside you can still make out the shell of a fireplace. It was here that the villagers gathered a couple of nights a week for a game of cards and to swap republican stories. The older generation would talk about the famine, loved ones overseas and their commitment to a thirty-two county Republic. It was here that George Harrison got his first glimpse of an Ireland torn apart by political violence.
In the early 1900s every second family in Shammer, on the outskirts of Kilkelly, were members of the IRA committed to the fight. The war against the British was raging and all of Ireland seemed up in arms.
Secret meetings were held in kitchens around the village and youngsters were given the honour of looking out for the enemy. Any blue shirts were spied on and reports of their movements were sent back to the branch.
“Members of the IRA in Shammer at the time passed on messages and reported back on Blueshirts in the village. Underground bunkers were spotted around the countryside with one in Shammerbawn,” noted one local.
George’s parents, Tom ‘Yank’ and Winnie McDermott, a native of the bordering village of Barnacogue had returned from America to a plot of land on the banks of the Siuleen River, donated by Tom’s sister. Tom was a stonecutter and Winnie ran the village shop, rearing ten children. The shop was something of a landmark in Shammer, where people from both sides of the river, Shammer Ban and Shammer Dubh met to play cards and talk politics. While the youngsters played handball against the gable wall, held boxing matches in a nearby field or tied up a couple of old socks as a football. Like many houses of its time the Harrison homestead was overlooked by the tricolour, which proudly flew from a post along the riverside. A Sinn Féin banner also flew in the village, with the words The Thomas Ashe Cumman, Sinn Féin and United We Stand. In 1916 Thomas Ashe led the rebels and was one of the last to surrender. He was deemed a hero after his arrest and conviction when he went on hunger strike. In later years Harrison became close friends with Paddy Logan, a comrade who had been on hunger strike with Ashe.
Republicanism was rife in the small village. A company of the IRA was founded, commanded by Martin Casey, a native of the area and a Sinn Féin cooperative was organised, of which Tom Harrison, George’s father, was a member. But George’s first hands-on experience of the War of Independence was late one night when his home was raided by the Black and Tans. Butter was taken from his mother before the soldiers threw George into a corner for wearing a green jumper. This experience stayed with him throughout his life and further increased his hatred for the British.
When Martin Casey led an attack against the Black and Tans in Kilkelly and burnt their station to the ground he was captured but efforts to negotiate between the British and the IRA led to his release. Harrison stood along the bonfires, as Casey was welcomed back into the village as a hero. This accompanied with the fact that the Civil War claimed a Shammer native, Michael Duffy, a cousin of Harrison, when he sustained gun wounds fighting with Irish Government troops led to Harrison’s growing republicanism. The environment in which he was reared was one raging with the republican movement and those who fought for their country were deemed to be heroes. Harrison’s own role in the republican movement first began when he delivered copies of An Phoblacht to homes around the village. Rarely did a week pass that George’s views on the affairs of the world did not appear in some publication or other and no later than the morning of the day he died, he penned the following sentiment for the inclusion in the newspaper ‘Saoirse’, of which he was a founding member.
May the spirit of those who suffered in the torture chambers
Of the Empire of Hell animate us with enough strength to
Free the land of our heart’s desire.
In dedication to all my comrades, the living and the dead

It was tradition that youngsters would join the army and at the age of 16 George Harrison joined the IRA, he was attending weekly meeting and running messages between local IRA units. He was trained to use a rifle in derelict buildings before being taken out to a nearby bog to fire two rounds of ammunition.
But the hopes of the Shammer unit were never fulfilled and the East Mayo Brigade never saw any real action. In the mid-30’s Harrison crossed the Irish sea where he did ‘pick and shovel’ work and at harvest time he, like many other Irish, picked potatoes on the English farms. Money was scarce at the time and while the Harrisons were reasonably well off, the few pounds sent home by George were welcomed.
George set foot on Shammer soil in 1938 before leaving his homestead for the last time to emigrate to the supposed land of opportunity. The Kilkelly man served in the US army from April 1944 to February 1946 attaining the rank of corporal and in the 1940’s he became active in numerous Irish-American organisations. He was an avid member of the James Connolly Club and it was during this time that he became friendly with Liam Cotter. The Kerry native, a seasoned member of the IRA, shared Harrison’s goal for a united Ireland disconnected from British rule.
Cotter and Harrison were close comrades, always anxious for news from the home front. Until his death, three months ago, Harrison was in contact with home at least once a week. Kathleen Knowles McGuirk, former General Secretary of Sinn Féin, received a phone call from Harrison every Sunday looking for an update on the Northern situation. He was also in contact with friends from Shammer with every conversation ending with the expression ‘Up Shammer’. Harrison never forgot his home place and when he and Cotter were approached by the IRA to supply weapons to his native country, they agreed but not without some hesitation. It was the death of Paddy McLogan, a friend of George’s that spurred the two men on. Suicide was suggested at the time but Harrison was suspicious and feared the M15 was behind his death.
It was in the 1950’s that his role in the IRA deepened and he began to supply guns to the IRA. When the troubles began in the North of Ireland he became the IRA’s main gunrunner supplying more than 3,000 weapons and one million rounds of ammunition to the IRA over three decades. Handguns, Armalites and Bazookas were all sent to Ireland but George Harrison was unrepentant to the end.
“We got everything we could lay our hands on and sent them to Ireland. It wasn’t easy, you had to rely on people coming over.”

George De Meo, an Italian neighbour of Harrison family, George had moved his parents and brother to Brooklyn in 1949, appeared to have strong mafia connections and was interested in guns, running a gun store outside the city. With De Meo connected to arms shipments for Cuban rebels, it wasn’t long before he became a crucial link in the Chain, supplying Harrison with arms for the IRA.
Despite having close encounters with the law, thousands of weapons were brought to the hands of IRA members in Ireland, all passing through George Harrison. However, the Harrison network was brought to a sudden halt in 1981 in an FBI sting operation, known as Operation Bushmill. The charge was gunrunning, the cast of characters might have come straight out of a film and the plot gimmick would have made the most experienced directors proud. It seemed like a cast- iron case against the IRA supporters but Harrison and four others were acquitted of illegal gunrunning. In defending the five, their attorneys had put the CIA on trial. The five Irish-born defendants could not be guilty of crimes against the United States Government, they claimed, because for 25 years the silent partner in their gunrunning operations had been the Government, specifically the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Thanks to evidence provided by a source connected to the CIA the five men had a simple defence and it worked.
When it was suggested during the court hearing that he had only been running guns for six months, Harrison was outraged. So much so in fact that his lawyer, shrewd, silver-tongued Mayo born Frank Durkan, told the Judge: “Your honour, the prosecutor has just charged my client with running guns for six months. My client feels somewhat insulted. Because as the Government well knows, he had aided and abetted and supplied arms to the rebels in Northern Ireland for a quarter of a century.”
Harrison and the other four IRA gunrunners were described as terrorists but to the end they argued that they were not terrorists but patriots, Irish patriots and patriotic Americans as well. They claimed that they had served the US in World War 11, Korea and Vietnam but they insisted that they would never turn their backs on the land of their birth.
The trial made for interesting viewing with a number of interesting character witnesses. 86-year-old Samuel P. O’Reilly took to the stand. The freedom fighter had been among the people in the GPO during the Easter Rising. Bernadette Devlin McAliskey, who sent a message from Ireland to be read at Harrison’s memorial, described Harrison and Falvay as among “the finest people living in this country, people who would never do anything that would dishonour either the country they were born in or the country they live in”. Her sentiments had two jurors in tears as she left the stand.
The jury accepted their unsubstantiated claim that the CIA was backing them.
“Up the IRA” declared George Harrison as he raised his arm like a victorious boxer after the trial, unrepentant to the end.
It was the cause of Irish freedom that fuelled his zeal; he fought for Ireland’s Independence from Britain all his life referring to Britain only as “the British Empire from Hell”.
Speaking at George Harrison’s memorial service in Manhattan, Frank Durkan spoke of Harrison’s charitable nature outside his usual activism.
“Harrison’s passion for the cause of the underdog was exceeded only by his dedication to the relief of their suffering. He was a soft touch”.
In spite of his avowed antipathy to many of the policies of organised religion, he gave generously, whether it was his new coat to a homeless man on the streets or a committee working to restore a church in his native village. Today people across the country enjoy the fruits of his labour. The church in Kilkelly was repaired with help from Harrison. Ballintubber Abbey and the stone to the Spanish Civil War Martyr Tommy Patton on Achill Island also received funding from the Mayo man.

Times have changed since Harrison set foot on Irish soil and so has political opinion. A lot of people on the island changed their political opinions but not George Harrison. He didn’t change one whit and what’s more he was proud of it. There was a time when being an IRA gunrunner was enough to get you a medal and a postage stamp with your name on it but that Ireland that Harrison left in the 1930’s has changed dramatically. Guns have been swapped for debates and bombs for peace talks, something George Harrison and his compatriots hadn’t in mind and he made his feeling on Northern Ireland clear. He described electoral politics as a dangerous distraction and believed that physical force was a means “to drive the Brits out, lock, stock and barrel”. As far as George Harrison was concerned the peace process was a “sell-out”.
Despite your political opinion one must agree that Harrison was determined in his cause to the end. He had survived a hail of bullets fired on him in a subway and was the victim of several muggings. He threw in his lot with Republican Sinn Féin and the Continuity IRA in 2004, when RSF was put on the US State Department foreign terrorist list. He promised to increase his donations to the party and was reported to say, “If the Bush administration want to jail me, I’m ready.” Harrison’s nurse, Priscilla McLean, was in Manhattan on the day he died ensuring that he had an absentee ballot to vote for John Kerry in the election for President in November. One message from Ireland, recited at Harrison’s memorial service summed up his shrewdness. He was always one step ahead.
“For 70 years of his adult life he led them a merry dance and lived and died on his own terms.” George Harrison died in New York at the age of 89, never having returned to his family cottage in Shammer for 66 years. Some believe that he made a vow never to return to the hearth of his home place until a united Ireland had been carved out.

Criminalising Republicans

Scotsman.com

IRA: Politicians and Media ‘Criminalising Republicans’

Tue 22 Mar 2005
11:50pm (UK)
By Gary Kelly, PA

The IRA repeated today its denial of responsibility for the murder of Belfast man Robert McCartney.

The Republican organisation in its traditional Easter message hit out at politicians and the media which it claims jumped on the bandwagon to blacken its name.

“The IRA has spelt out its position in relation to the killing of Robert McCartney. It was wrong, it was murder, it was a crime. But it was not carried out by the IRA, nor was it carried out on behalf of the IRA.

“The IRA moved quickly to deal with those involved. We have tried to assist in whatever way we can. Unfortunately, it would appear that no matter what we do it will never be enough for some,” it stated.

Mr McCartney, a 33-year-old father of two from the Short Strand area of east Belfast was stabbed to death in the street on January 30 after a bar-room row with republicans.

His family has waged a determined campaign to bring his killers to justice, forcing the IRA to suspend three of its members suspected of being involved in the murder.

However, amid claims that witnesses have been subjected to intimidation, no one has come forward to provide evidence of what happened in Magennis’s Bar that night.

In a statement earlier this month, the IRA caused political uproar when it revealed it had offered to shoot those responsible for the murder.

When Mr McCartney’s sisters and partner travelled to US last week to meet President George Bush and other leading US politicians, it was clear republicans had become increasingly isolated.

In today’s statement, the organisation accused the British and Irish governments of a concerted campaign to criminalise its struggle.

It is continuing to deny it was behind the £26.5 million raid on the Northern Bank headquarters in the centre of Belfast before Christmas.

“The sustained campaign directed against the republican people over recent months is nothing new,” it stated.

“We will not allow our opponents to further their own petty self-interests by levelling false allegations against Oglaigh na hEireann.”

Speaking in Washington last week, Northern Ireland Secretary Paul Murphy said there would be no political progress in Northern Ireland until the issue of IRA criminality was dealt with once and for all.

But the IRA in its Easter statement said the primary responsibility for moving the situation forward now rests with the two governments.

“They must demonstrate their commitment to a lasting peace.

“Pandering to the demands of those who are opposed change is not the way forward.”

IRA Easter message

IAIS

IRA RELEASES EASTER MESSAGE

03/22/05 18:53 EST

The IRA in its Easter statement said its members are not criminals, and it has done all in its power to assist the McCartney family to bring Robert’s killers to justice.

“The IRA moved quickly to deal with those involved. We have tried to assist in whatever way we can,” it said. “Unfortunately, it would appear that no matter what we do it will never be enough for some. The IRA has spelt out its position in relation to the killing of Robert McCartney. It was wrong, it was murder, it was a crime. But it was not carried out by the IRA, nor was it carried out on behalf of the IRA.”

“Those in the political and media establishments, who have been so quick to jump on the bandwagon, have again laid bare their own hypocrisy. This causes justifiable resentment among republicans. But it must not cloud the issue. Óglaigh na hÉireann expects the highest standards of conduct from our volunteers.”

The IRA made no reference to the Northern Bank robbery but said it was not criminal. “Our patriot dead are not criminals.”

There was no hint or threat of the IRA potentially ending its ceasefire. Not was there was any suggestion that the IRA was preparing for a radical initiative to help end the Northern political logjam.

It said that from over 10 years ago “until now”, it had “demonstrated our continuing support for this process”.

The IRA said for the past two years the process “has been locked in stalemate and has slipped backwards into deepening crisis”, but blamed this situation on “rejectionist unionism, aided and abetted by the two governments”.

The statement, carried in today’s edition of An Phoblacht, blamed unionists for rejecting IRA “initiatives” in October 2003 and December last year.

“The DUP attempted to turn the initiative of December 2004 into a humiliation of the IRA,” it said.

“The concerted efforts of both governments since then to undermine the integrity of our cause, by seeking to criminalise the republican struggle, is clear evidence that our opponents remain fixated with the objective of defeating republicans, rather than developing the peace process.”

Yes to cruelty

BreakingNews.ie

**Bottom line is money

Govt says no to fur farming ban

22/03/2005 - 22:36:12

The Government tonight ruled out a nationwide ban on fur farming but said it may introduce stricter licensing requirements in the future.

Junior Agriculture Minister John Browne said a Green Party Dáil Bill to outlaw the industry was neither practical nor useful.

Six mink farms in the Republic export €2m worth of fur each year.

Greens earlier claimed that animals were kept in cramped cages and gassed or electrocuted at six months old.

But Mr Browne said annual inspections by the Agriculture Department indicated that the animals were well cared for and slaughter techniques complied with EU regulations.

However he said: “I am prepared to keep the position under ongoing review in the light of developments.

“I would consider introducing a provision in the forthcoming legislation into animal health and welfare which would require the extending of a licensing requirement to all enterprises engaged in farming animals for their fur.”

Earlier, Greens leader Trevor Sargent said: “Our intention is to end this needless and cruel practice via the Fur Farming (Prohibition) Bill 2004.”

The party said that a 2004 opinion poll showed that nearly two in three Irish people believe that fur farming should be banned.

TDs will debate the Bill again tomorrow night before a vote is taken on the issue.

The Cabinet discussed the Bill today and decided not to support a ban, which already exists in Northern Ireland, the UK and Austria.






















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