SAOIRSE32

8/4/2005

John Paul’s funeral

RTE News

John Paul II is buried in St Peter’s

08 April 2005 18:35

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Pope John Paul’s coffin has been buried in St Peter’s Basilica in the Vatican.

His funeral mass in the open in St Peter’s Square was attended by hundreds of world political and religious leaders in what was one of the biggest gatherings of global leaders ever seen.

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John Paul’s cypress coffin with the wind blowing the pages of his last will and testament

Tens of thousands of pilgrims watched the ceremony in St Peter’s Square, while millions more watched on giant video screens around the city.

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The mass was interrupted briefly when crowds of worshippers, mostly apparently Polish, started chanting ‘Santo Subito’, asking for the late Pope to be made a saint immediately.

Officials had urged the visitors to stay in special tented areas on the outskirts of Rome, but many defied the appeal and spent the night camping out near the scene of the funeral.

It is estimated that up to 800,000 people followed the event in the Pope’s home town of Krakow, in southern
Poland.

The chief celebrant was the German Cardinal, Joseph Ratzinger, the head of the Vatican Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.

Last night, Vatican officials closed the doors of St Peter’s Basilica, ending four days of public homage.

It is estimated that up to two million people filed past the Pope’s body to pay their respects.

The huge security operation will remain in place in Rome until tomorrow. The authorities say they are coping with the challenge so far.

Sunset service underway

Meanwhile, several thousand people are gathered at the papal cross in Dublin’s Phoenix Park for a Sunset Service of Remembrance.

It is being televised live on RTÉ Two Television.

The Taoiseach and the Minister for the Environment, Dick Roche, were among the early arrivals.

Many schools around the country remained closed today and workers were allowed to take time off to attend mass or other remembrance services.

Frank McBrearty

Daily Ireland

Frank fights back

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Donegal man Frank McBrearty Snr was subjected to a campaign of harassment and intimidation instigated by gardai investigating the death of Raphoe cattle dealer Richie Barron, it emerged yesterday.
Mr McBrearty told the Morris Tribunal of the Garda corruption in Donegal that followed Mr Barron’s death, which is now believed to be the result of a road traffic accident, and how he and his family were the victims of a “state sponsored conspiracy”.
He also made the dramatic move of bringing Justice Morris out to his jeep to show the judge the huge amount of legal papers he has to cope with without having legal representation.
Mr McBrearty’s son, Frank Jnr, was arrested for murder and Mr McBrearty Snr was also arrested following claims he had interfered with witnesses.
Mr McBrearty denied claims that he had intimidated witnesses, and said he had employed a private investigator Billy Flynn on the condition that if he found any evidence against the nightclub owner he was to go to the garda with it.
“I’m an innocent man and I want the truth. I did not intimidate any witnesses,” Mr McBrearty told the tribunal.
Mr McBrearty Snr said he had gone to Superintendent John Fitzgerald to ask him to stop the “frame-up”.
“He told me he was going to deal with it, that was the last I heard of it. John Fitzgerald knew me so well. He knew I could not be involved in any kind of crime like that.
“The guards were still carrying on round my premises,” he said. Checkpoints were put around the pub and gardai sat in his premises at night.
Mr McBrearty Snr said he felt terrible when he saw a Crimeline programme about Richie Barron’s death, which he claims was made with information fed by former Garda John O’Dowd to Supt Fitzgerald and others.
“I wish to protest about the manner in which the Crimeline report was portrayed by gardai, where the centre of the investigation was pinpointed as being my premises when the movement or death of Richie Barron was nothing whatsoever to do with me.”
Mr McBrearty accused Mr O’Dowd of harassing him.
“From the actions of Mr O’Dowd I can see it clearly: he was the main man in this whole thing. He orchestrated it, he set it up, he used William Doherty.
He claims “high-up officers right down to gardai” are lying.
“All they have to do is admit the wrong they have done,” he said.
Mr McBrearty told the tribunal that his family had received death threats and defamatory graffiti was scrawled on his premises in Raphoe as a result of the rumour that they were involved in Mr Barron’s death.
Mr McBrearty, who served with a peace keeping mission in the Congo and spent 15 years living in the UK before returning to Ireland in 1976, said his life had been destroyed by the incidents in Raphoe.
“I’ve never got my business back to full capacity. I’ve borrowed a lot of money to keep going,” he said.

‘They shoot horses don’t they’?

Daily Ireland

Call to shoot thieves

A public meeting to discuss criminality in the Ardoyne area of Belfast descended into chaos when sections of the crowd demanded paramilitaries shoot car thieves in the head.
However, senior republicans rejected the calls, insisting that punishment beatings do not work.
They urged the crowd to look at different ways to tackle anti-social behaviour other than violence.
Although welcomed by the majority of the 200 people in attendance, a small group of around 15 berated republicans for their stance.
The meeting on Wednesday evening also witnessed a major argument between relatives of a man found dead in Ardoyne two months ago and members of Sinn Féin.
The family of Stephen Montgomery believe the father of two was murdered and they accused republicans of doing nothing to help them bring his alleged killers to justice.
The PSNI, however, is treating the incident as a fatal hit and run.
After 45 minutes the meeting eventually broke up when a large section of the crowd walked out.
Local community workers moved yesterday to distance themselves from the proceedings.
Ardoyne Focus Group development manager, Mickey Liggett, said the public meeting did not have the support of the wider community.
He also described as “way over the top” leaflets put through hundreds of letterboxes advertising the meeting which described Ardoyne as a “community from hell”.
Mr Liggett said: “This meeting was organised by a number of individuals who did not have the support of the Ardoyne Focus Group.
“From all accounts, it descended into a slanging match, offering no solutions to the area’s anti-social problems.
“Punishment beatings are not the way to deal with crime. This community is opposed to that type of retribution.”
Community Restorative Justice, an organisation that attempts to deal with the root cause of anti-social problems, had an equally dim view of the meeting.
Spokesman Brendan Clarke said: “It was an attempt to orchestrate community endorsement of physical punishment.
“I was there and, thankfully, the vast majority of people in the hall rejected these calls.
“We need to come together as a community to tackle anti-social behaviour.
“Shooting teenagers in the legs doesn’t work.”

Let it snow!

Belfast Telegraph

Snow falls in April cold snap

By Damien McGinley
08 April 2005

Snow fell in many places this morning as the long predicted cold snap hit Northern Ireland.

Temperatures dropped to freezing overnight as an Arctic airflow extended south across the UK and Ireland.

Many early morning car journeys were disrupted by the snow flurries and ice patches on the roads.

Gritters were out throughout the night treating the major roads across the province. All the main routes had been salted by 7.30am.

The Roads Service had no reports of problems on the roads this morning and there were no problems at the airports or ferries.

Quite a few snow showers fell overnight although they were fairly light.

It is normal to get the odd cold snap in April but snowfall is very rare.

April temperatures typically range from 3C to 11C. At 9am today, the temperature in Belfast was 0C.

Temperatures are expected to reach a high of 6C today.

A change is predicted in Rome’s weather ahead of Pope John Paul II’s funeral also.

After a week of searing temperatures that caused many people to faint while waiting in line to see the Pope’s body, weather forecasters predicted it to be cloudy with possible rain.

Pearce Gilmore

Belfast Telegraph

Life-saving surgery for brave youngster

By Nigel Gould
08 April 2005

Ulster prayers will be with brave little Pearce Gilmore today as he goes through a life-saving brain operation in America.

Brain surgeon, Dr Rick Abbot, was scheduled to perform the desperately needed surgery on the Coleraine boy around midday (BST).

More than £40,000 was raised by readers throughout the province to send Pearce (9) to the US after an appeal in the Belfast Telegraph.

Pearce, mum Sophie and dad Seamus met up with Dr Abbot in his New York practice earlier this week.

Tests, including an MRI scan, were carried out on the youngster ahead of his five-hour surgery.

Pearce is suffering from an unusual brain condition and his family say his only hope of survival rests with Dr Abbot.

Several weeks ago, in an interview with the Belfast Telegraph, Dr Abbot, a paediatric neurosurgeon who works and teaches at the Einstein Centre in the Bronx, said that as far as he was concerned the operation was “not unusual”.

He said his practice specialised in this type of operation and were “renowned internationally” for it.

Around 10 similar operations are carried out there every year.

Speaking from New York earlier in the week, dad Seamus said the surgery could not come quickly enough.

“Now that we have arrived, we just want to get the surgery over with,” he said.

“Pearce is happy and everything is going to plan at the moment.”

It is likely that Pearce will be in intensive care for a few days and he will have to spend a further four to six days recovering in hospital.

On Tuesday, he spent the day visiting New York’s Bronx Zoo and he also went into Manhattan with his parents.

Meanwhile, the fund for Pearce now stands at more than £52,000 with donations coming in all the time.

dirty legislation

RTÉ nEWS

UK govt pushes through Inquiries Bill

07 April 2005 21:54

The British government has pushed through what the SDLP has called ‘dirty’ new legislation on the Pat Finucane inquiry.

The controversial Inquiries Bill went through its final stages in the House of Lords and will come into law when royal assent is given.

Mr Finucane, a Belfast solicitor, was shot dead 16 years ago by loyalist paramilitaries amidst allegations of collusion by British security agencies.

Canadian judge Peter Cory recommended a public inquiry into the killing of Mr Finucane.

He later criticised the form of inquiry put forward by the Prime Minister, saying new British legislation would make a meaningful inquiry impossible.

Now as Parliament is about to be dissolved Tony Blair has pushed through the inquiries bill, which allows a British government minister to limit the public scope of any future inquiry.

The Finucane family say they will not co-operate with any such investigation.

Plastic bullets condemned

breakingnews.ie

Rights group criticises approval for new plastic bullets

08/04/2005 - 08:12:04

A human rights group in the North has condemned the Policing Board’s decision to endorse the purchase of a new form of plastic bullet.

The board approved the purchase yesterday, meaning the new “attenuated energy projectile” will be available for use, if needed, during the upcoming marching season.

The new bullets are claimed to be “less lethal” than the ones they are replacing, which killed 17 people in the North during the Troubles, including 14 children.

The Committee on the Administration of Justice, however, said the Policing Board had held no public meetings on the matter and had sought no independent medical advice.

Sinn Féin has also condemned the approval of the new plastic bullets, saying it would anger the nationalist community.

The SDLP also opposes the new bullets, but its two members on the Policing Board were out-voted yesterday.

‘April is the cruelest month’

An Phoblacht

Two days in April - Remembering the Past

BY SHANE Mac THOMÁIS

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Click to view - Photo: IRA Chief of Staff Liam Lynch was shot dead in April 1923

On 10 April 1923, 82 years ago, Liam Lynch was shot by Pro-Treaty forces.

General Liam Lynch, Chief of Staff, IRA, was born in Barnagurraha, County Limerick, in 1893. Lynch had commanded the Cork No 2 Brigade of the IRA during the ferocious days of the Tan War. He would eventually rise to command the 1st Southern Division, IRA.

When the Treaty with England was signed in December 1921, like many other IRA men, Lynch refused to abide by its term.

On that April morning in 1923, Lynch and a small number of his comrades were sitting down to a cup of tea when word came that a column of ‘Staters’ was coming across the Knockmealdown Mountains, cutting off their only retreat from another column of the enemy they knew to be in the valley below.

Carrying important papers that they wished to keep safe at all costs, Lynch and six comrades began a retreat up the mountain, hoping to avoid the trap. Soon they ran into the pro-Treaty forces on the mountainside, and exchanged fire. Lynch and his party were only armed with pistols and at a great disadvantage. Their only hope for escape was over an open expanse of mountain, where they would be exposed to what they knew would be a withering fire.

Having little choice, they moved up the mountain, bullets whistling all around them. Finally, inevitably, a bullet struck Liam. After surviving so many fights for Irish freedom, luck had finally run out for Liam Lynch.

He cried “My God, I’m hit, lads”, as he slumped to the ground. As his comrades gathered around him they saw that he was badly wounded. Lynch’s comrades tried to carry him with them up the mountain but it was impossible. He finally ordered them to leave him. “Perhaps they’ll bandage me when they come up,” he said.

Knowing that the papers they carried had to be saved, and that they could never make it up the mountain carrying him, his comrades reluctantly obeyed his order and left him behind. When the Staters reached him later and asked who he was, he replied: “I’m Liam Lynch, get me a priest and a doctor, I’m dying.” Lynch lived to reach the hospital in Clonmel but he died there at 8pm that night.

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On 9 April 1981, 24 years ago, republican POW and Hunger Striker Bobby Sands was elected to Westminster as the MP for Fermanagh/South Tyrone.

On 30 March, Bobby was nominated as candidate for the Fermanagh/South Tyrone by-election, caused by the sudden death of Frank Maguire, an independent MP who supported the prisoners’ cause.

The next morning, day 31 of his Hunger Strike, he was visited by Owen Carron, who acted as his election agent. Owen told of that first visit: “Instead of meeting that young man of the poster with long hair and a fresh face, even at that time when Bobby wasn’t too bad, he was radically changed. He was very thin and bony and his hair was cut short.”

Bobby won over 52% of the vote in the by-election compared to 49% for the candidate of the Official Unionist party, Harry West.

Bobby Sands’ winning margin was 1,400. Owen Carron, said:

“The nationalist people have voted against unionism and against the H-Blocks. It is time Britain got out of Ireland and put an end to the torture of this country.”

Bobby had no illusions with regard to his election victory. His reaction was not one of over-optimism. After the result was announced, Owen visited Bobby.

“He had already heard the result on the radio. He was in good form alright but he always used to keep saying, ‘In my position you can’t afford to be optimistic’. In other words, he didn’t take it that because he’d won an election that his life would be saved. He thought that the Brits would need their pound of flesh. I think he was always working on the premise that he would have to die.”

At 1.17am on Tuesday, 5 May, on the 66th day on hunger strike, Bobby Sands MP, died in the prison hospital at Long Kesh.

PSNI targeting families

An Phoblacht

PSNI fabricates anti-republican ‘evidence

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A Special Branch-inspired campaign of targeting vulnerable families in the Poleglass and Twinbrook areas of West Belfast to massage statistics for the IMC and the operation of the PSNI as a sectarian body in Ballymena are just the latest incidents that illustrate why many northern nationalists have good cause to remain highly suspicious of the force. LAURA FRIEL reports

HAS the PSNI been fabricating ‘evidence’ against republicans in an attempt to bolster ‘information’ about republican ‘threats’ for the IMC? It certainly looks as if this has been the case in West Belfast. A community group working in the Poleglass and Twinbrook area has expressed concern about a number of vulnerable young people who have been targeted by the PSNI.

Community Restorative Justice has been established in the Lagan Valley area for over a decade. The community group was formed as a mechanism to deal with grievances and disputes within the local community through mediation. The CRJ works closely with a range of statutory bodies, including both social services and the housing executive. It is also an established mechanism of mediation between local people and armed groups.

An Phoblacht contacted the CRJ after a number of families complained that they had been recently targeted by the PSNI, who had informed them of threats against them that subsequently turned out to be false. Members of the PSNI had visited their homes to issue official ‘warning’ notices claiming that there was an imminent ‘PIRA’ threat against a family member.

While individual families were initially prepared to believe there had just been a terrible mistake, the realisation that the PSNI have issued a series of false warnings to a number of families in the same area is beginning to look like something more sinister. Significantly, the families do not appear to have been randomly targeted but specifically selected by the PSNI.

Deirdre Groves is a trained mediator and has worked with CRJ for over five years. She is currently project co-ordinator in the Poleglass/Twinbrook area office. Deirdre is one of a number of members of the CRJ who have been working with the families targeted by the PSNI. The CRJ has documented each case.

“Families have been visited by PSNI officers and have been issued with a PSNI official notice alleging a threat against a family member by ‘PIRA’. A young person in each of the families concern has been told by the PSNI that they are under a threat of violence or death but in each case the allegation has been totally false,” says Deirdre.

Through their established mechanisms, the CRJ were able to establish very quickly that no such threat existed. In each case, the family targeted by the PSNI has had a similar profile. “They are not families with any serious anti-social behaviour history,” says Deirdre.

The CRJ have documented each incident as local families have brought them to their attention and they believe a significant pattern has begun to emerge. The individuals targeted by the PSNI have been particularly vulnerable. Some have been suffering from depression or are currently receiving psychiatric care. “Most worrying of all, some would be considered suicidal and even have a history of attempted suicide,” says Deirdre.

“It has been a traumatic experience for the families. In some cases, because the families were themselves republicans, it has been easier for them to accept reassurances but a number of families have been far harder to reassure.

“I arrived at work one morning to find a mother and son waiting outside. Both were visibly shaken. Other young people temporarily left the area while their families sought clarification. They have all returned with reassurances,” says Deirdre.

But although the CRJ has been able to expose the PSNI allegations of threats as nonsense, a number of the families have been repeatedly targeted by the PSNI. “One family in particular has been visited three times and presented with three official notices of threats,” says Deirdre.

In a particularly sinister case, the PSNI told one young man that he was under threat because republicans suspected he was acting as an informer. “This young person is particularly vulnerable and never leaves his home. I’m afraid that the PSNI are deliberately targeting vulnerable people in the hope of pushing someone over the edge,” says Deirdre.

These series of incidents began prior to the last IMC report and have continued since. The number of official notices of threats from armed groups issued by the PSNI is the kind of data upon which the IMC relies.

Issuing false warnings would be a cynical ploy by the PSNI to increase the perceived threat posed by republicans but that’s not the worst scenario feared by local people. Some people have pointed out that the suicide of a young person, where the PSNI could claim republican intimidation, would further feed the current media frenzy.

“It would be despicable if anyone pursued such an agenda by putting a young person’s life at risk,” says Deirdre.

In one incident, the PSNI issued a warning of an alleged ‘threat’ from the CRJ. “This in itself exposes the nonsense of the PSNI’s official warnings. The CRJ has a long and established record of peaceful mediation as a method of resolving difficulties and our work with many statutory agencies bears witness to that record,” says Deirdre.

Following the allegation against the CRJ, the Social Services contacted the PSNI to refute the allegation and complain about the targeting of the group.

Speaking to An Phoblacht, a parent of one of the young people targeted by the PSNI described the initial shock experienced by her family.

“We were distracted but after the PSNI had left, when we thought about it, it just didn’t make any sense. I contacted the CRJ and they were able to check it out and get back to us fairly quickly. It was utter nonsense,” she said.

“I am a republican myself and so it was easier for me to accept reassurances as genuine. But for other families, those who feel more isolated, reassurance is going to be more difficult.

“It’s important for them to know that this hasn’t just happened to them. It’s important for them to know a number have families have been contacted and that the whole thing is a lot of nonsense, just a ploy by the PSNI. I’m angry. I feel the PSNI has been playing politics and my family has become a pawn in some wider game,” she said.

Local Sinn Féin councillor Veronica Willis has condemned the cynical manipulation by the PSNI of vulnerable young people and their families in her constituency and described the actions of the PSNI as “an attempt to demonise republicans”. The strategy had all the hallmarks of the Special Branch or British dirty tricks, she said.

Collusion with loyalists

Meanwhile, the PSNI have been accused of colluding with loyalists engaging in sectarian violence against nationalists living in Ballymena. In recent months, a loyalist gang that operates in the town centre has targeted young nationalists in a series of sectarian attacks.

During a recent incident, a local loyalist broke a young Catholic woman’s jaw. In another attack, a Protestant woman was targeted because her boyfriend is a Catholic. The woman suffered a broken nose.

In the most recent attack, a group of masked loyalists armed with baseball bats smashed a car belonging to a 24-year-old nationalist outside the leisure centre where he works.

Darren McGinty said the gang caused more than £3,000 worth of damage to his car. A receptionist who witnessed the incident had alerted Darren to the attack. The gang escaped into the nearby Ballykeel estate.

Darren believes that he and other young nationalists in Ballymena are being singled out for loyalist attacks because of PSNI stop and search harassment. A number of complaints about PSNI harassment have already been passed to the Ombudsman’s office.

Sinn Féin MLA in North Antrim Phillip McGuigan has accused the PSNI of being involved in a campaign of „political policing‰.

“The PSNI are singling out young nationalists in the city centre for particular attention and before long they are attacked by loyalists,” said McGuigan.

“I have been in contact with the Ombudsman’s office and I’ve raised the issue with the British Irish Intergovernmental Secretariat,” said McGuigan.

Educating Dermot Ahern

Northern nationalist experience on the ground stands in sharp contrast to the notion of policing expressed by Irish Minister for Foreign Affairs, Dermot Ahern. In a statement released to the Irish Times, Ahern urged Sinn Féin to support policing in the north as it is currently constituted.

“The challenge now for Sinn Féin is to convince us that they want decent policing in Northern Ireland and that they are in a position to make a contribution towards it,” wrote Ahern.

According to the minister, a decision to support policing means “offering positive encouragement to young nationalists to join the police or the part time reserve.

“It means contributing constructively to the work of the Policing Boards and the district policing partnerships and an end to all subtle forms of discouragement and intimidation that are still inhibiting ordinary people from dealing with the police.”

Clearly, Dermot Ahern’s notion of the PSNI is far removed from the experience of northern nationalists. Ordinary people aren’t inhibited from dealing with the PSNI because of republican “discouragement and intimidation”. Neither is it simply a matter of “deep concern about some issues from the past”.

Ordinary people are inhibited from dealing with the PSNI because they are still experiencing the force as sectarian and partisan. The fact that Special Branch remains at the heart of policing in the north means that the PSNI is still operating as a political rather than civic body.

It’s not just a case of ordinary people having yet to see the changes they were promised fully realised. The fact that these changes have not been realised has a direct impact on how policing is experienced by ordinary people.

Ordinary nationalists don’t trust the PSNI. They don’t trust the PSNI not because of anything republicans might say or do but because the PSNI has failed to demonstrate it is reliably trustworthy.

Jim Gray lifted

BBC

Former UDA leader Gray questioned

Former UDA leader Jim Gray has been arrested near Banbridge in County Down.

A PSNI spokeswoman would only confirm that a man had been arrested outside Loughbrickland in connection with a serious crime inquiry.

Gray was stood down from the loyalist paramilitary Ulster Defence Association leadership in east Belfast last week.

Meanwhile, the police have carried out a number of searches in the east Belfast area as part of an investigation into serious crime.






















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