SAOIRSE32

22/5/2005

BBC strike

RTE News

BBC services to be hit by 24-hour strike

22 May 2005 16:53

Thousands of BBC journalists and technicians are preparing to stage the biggest strike to affect the corporation in more than a decade.

Union leaders said flagship programmes including ‘Radio 4 Today’ and ‘World At One’ and ‘Newsnight’ will not be broadcast because of the 24-hour walkout, which starts at midnight.

‘Five Live’ will also be badly hit and regional news bulletins are expected to be cut from 30 minutes to just a few minutes.

The National Union of Journalists, BECTU and AMICUS said they expected up to 11,000 workers to join the walkout.

Picket lines will be mounted from midnight at Bush House in central London and the BBC TV Centre in Shepherds Bush.

Journalists and technical staff in regional centres including Belfast and Derry (Radio Foyle) will join picket lines tomorrow morning.

The NUJ General Secretary, Jeremy Dear, said it would be the biggest strike against the BBC in living memory as part of protests against controversial plans to axe 4,000 jobs.

The BECTU said it believed tomorrow will be the best supported strike in the history of the BBC.

The NUJ and BECTU said they had recruited 2,000 new members between them since BBC Director General Mark Thompson announced the job losses in March.

The BBC has warned the unions that by taking industrial action they were putting at risk the corporation’s relationship with the public.

The BBC has said it will do everything it can to broadcast programmes tomorrow.

Mr Thompson sent a special message to staff on Friday saying he wanted to return to negotiations with the unions as soon as possible.

He said he recognised that tomorrow will present difficult choices for those who had voted to strike as well as for those who had not.

Patsy O’Hara Commemoration speech

IRA2

**Posted to the group by Danielle Ni Dhighe

Speech at Patsy O’Hara Commemoration

22 May 2005

Delivered by John Nixon, a young Irish Republican Socialist Party member from Derry

Friends and Comrades,

It is a privilege and an honour to be asked to speak here today on behalf of the Irish Republican Socialist Movement at this, the 24th anniversary commemoration of the death of INLA Volunteer and hunger strike martyr Patsy O’Hara.

I wasn’t even born 24 years ago when Patsy and his nine comrades embarked upon a fast to the death in their unified and dignified protest against the failed British attempt to criminalise the republican struggle. Their strength was their youth, their determination, their unity and of course the fact that they were fighting for what was right. That is why they prevailed in the end but as we know that struggle cost us dearly. Our ten comrades died within Long Kesh and during the same period others fell in action on the outside, equally courageous and equally determined to rid our nation of the imperialist aggressor. 1981 is a year that republicans in Ireland will never forget because we lost the best people that the struggle had produced. When I ask comrades of Patsy to describe him I hear stories of courage and of generosity. I hear of a soldier of the working class who never shirked his responsibilities to his community. I hear of a political activist who served on the national leadership of the IRSP whilst on the run. A true hero of Ireland’s working class.

At just twenty three years old Patsy had his full life in front of him. He, in his short life, had seen so much that moulded him into the person that he became. He had experienced the oppression and when just a teenager had taken part in the uprising along with the people of this city against the unjust British occupation of Ireland.

The young people of Derry and even of Ireland have a lot to learn from the example of Patsy O’Hara. In today’s society of greed where joyriding, drug abuse and anti-community behaviour is becoming rampant people should look towards the likes of Patsy for inspiration.

This is a society in which working class areas are being flooded with dangerous drugs such as ecstasy, cocaine and heroin. Joyriding and burglaries are increasing and the PSNI sit back and allow these people
to operate openly with sanction, not that we ever expected anything different from them. Is it any wonder, with the backing of the PSNI, that some of our young people are turning their backs on their communities? We see by the current situation around the Creggan estate what damage these drugs and their dealers can do to the cohesion of communities. Only by embracing the revolutionary ideals of Patsy O’Hara can working class youth realise their collective potential. We say to the young people of this city: “Follow Patsy’s example and fight for your people. Join the Irish Republican Socialist Movement and play a positive role within your communities. Be part of the Irish Revolution!”

Patsy O’Hara by his ideas and his actions is the ultimate role model for the youth of Ireland today. Patsy was not deflected from the revolutionary path by the hollow heroes of the day. When I read about Patsy O’Hara I am reading about a person who was a militant, he was politicised and he was dedicated to the struggle to remove the British occupation forces from Ireland. He was a revolutionary who did not tire of standing up for what is right. Patsy was the Irish equivalent to Che Guevara. A young man who spent his life fighting for freedom and justice.

I could not speak today by not bringing to your attention a struggle of immense importance that is currently taking place at the Eastern borders of Europe. Just last week in Turkey a twelfth wave of death fasters has taken the place of those who have died before them in their struggle against the same type of vindictive and oppressive regime that our comrades in 1981 had to face down. We send our solidarity to our brothers and sisters in Turkey who are embroiled in the most serious of situations and who are facing that situation heroically. We admire their resolve to defeat the fascist regime in Turkey as any victory for the working class abroad is a victory for us here in Ireland also. The campaign in Turkey’s prisons and working class areas has been going on since October 2000. Their slogan “Victory or Death” sums up their resolve and determination in defeating Turkey’s vindictive regime and, comrades, I urge all of you to help bring this massacre to an end by getting involved in renewed campaigns in support of the Turkish prisoners.

So far 118 prisoners and their relatives on the outside have died during their continued protest. Four years ago, just before she died, one of those martyrs, Arzu Guler, sent the following message to the people of Derry: “Our Death Fast attack against the F-types is not only for the Turkish people, it is for all the world. We cannot separate our struggle from the world’s. We know about the struggles of Patsy O’Hara and Michael Devine and we support their cause. We greet you from the depths of our hearts.”

Go raibh maith agat.

Catholic home attacked

BBC

Two held after ’sectarian’ attack

Two men have been arrested following what police said was a sectarian attack on a Catholic family’s home.

A petrol bomb was thrown at the front of the house in Brookfield Gardens in Ahoghill at about 0400 BST on Sunday.

It missed the house, hit a tree and burnt out. Kathleen McCaughey was in the house at the time. She was unhurt.

Ms McCaughey, who has lived in Ahoghill for more than 50 years, said she blamed a few individuals. She said it was the latest in a series of recent attacks.

“Since Easter Sunday, I’ve had windows smashed, boys breaking in and paint bombs thrown,” she said.

“A petrol bomb was thrown at the house and if it wasn’t for a neighbour, we might have been burned out.

“He saw it all and chased the boys away.”

She said the attack would not make her move out of the area.

SDLP assembly member Sean Farren said the attack could have been fatal.

“This is the latest in what seems to be a concerted campaign of attacks and intimidation in this area,” he said.

“But it is also a serious escalation, because sooner or later petrol bombing of homes while people are asleep can only lead to tragedy.”

Police have appealed for any witnesses to contact them.

The dogs of Ireland

Indymedia Ireland

Ireland has one of the worst records of killing dogs in Europe

by Ciaran Long - Alliance For Animal Rights Sunday, May 22 2005, 12:36pm
dublin / animal rights / news report

JERSEY is coming to the rescue of Ireland’s death-row dogs. A truck-load of the abandoned animals will be shipped out to the tiny channel island, saving them from being put down.

Ireland has one of the worst records of killing dogs in Europe, with more than 17,000 unwanted pets put to death every year in pounds that cannot find owners to take them. Scotland, which has a similar canine population, kills only 800.

David Coulson of Leitrim Animal Welfare (LAW) said the move was part of a strategy to cut Ireland’s “staggering levels” of healthy dogs being put down. “We have a horrendous record of putting down animals and most of them end up being shipped out to Germany for incineration or in Dublin they end up being dumped on a landfill. It really needs to be tackled.

“We will be taking our first consignment of healthy dogs out to Jersey next month so they can be re-homed there because it is impossible to re-home them all in Ireland,” said Coulson, who is also the Leitrim dog warden.

Coulson, who founded LAW eight years ago, has been pioneering a “no kill” policy in the county, where 95% of unwanted dogs are found new homes. This compares with a national rate of just 13%, with all other animals being put to death after just five days in their county or city pound.

Now Jersey has agreed to help out and Coulson is hoping that the first consignment of dogs will arrive later this month.

Times Online

‘Public disorder’ in north Belfast

BBC

Police warning of city ‘disorder’

Police have said there is “public disorder” in north Belfast and warned motorists to avoid part of the area.

They have said drivers should avoid Twadell Avenue, Woodvale Road and the Crumlin Road at Ardoyne shopfronts.

Officers in riot gear are moving in to separate rival gangs in the area. A number of missiles have also been thrown.

Meanwhile, police have closed the security gates at Lanark Way in west Belfast.

Revolutionary march to Stormont

Seven Stars Republican Socialist News

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**Sent via group email by Peter Urban - from ‘The Plough’ Vol. 2- No 37

GOING RESPECTABLE

Liam O’ Ruairc, a comrade from the Irish Republican Socialist Party, looks at Sinn Fein’s evolution under Gerry Adams over the last 20 years.

The transition of Sinn Féin from principled revolutionary organisation to opportunist, reformist, constitutional nationalist party has been the subject of many a commentary. The whole process traces its roots to the 1980s. Before the end of that decade, the party was gradually becoming incorporated into the institutions it was supposed to overthrow, mainly through the pressure of electoral considerations and clientelist expectations.

At the beginning of the 1980s, the IRA’s stance regarding constitutional politics was “quite simple and clear-cut … outside of a 32-county sovereign independent democracy, the IRA will have no involvement in what is loosely called constitutional politics” (‘IRA attitude on elections’ An Poblachtach/Republican News September 5 1981, p20). However, the movement soon introduced the tactic of contesting elections through Sinn Féin. “Who here really believes that we can win the war through the ballot box? But will anyone here object if with a ballot paper in this hand, and an Armalite in this hand, we take power in Ireland?” declared Danny Morrison (‘By ballot and bullet’ APRN November 5 1981, p2).

The ‘Armalite and ballot box’ strategy was born. The purpose of contesting elections and giving an increasingly important role to Sinn Féin was not in order to become some respectable constitutional party, but to introduce a new tactic in the anti-imperialist struggle. The reasons advanced for electoral interventions were, first, that it showed that the national struggle was political, not criminal, in nature. It is difficult to label people as criminal when tens of thousands go out to vote for them. It also refuted the British government’s propaganda that the Republicans were a small isolated group receiving no substantial support.

British strategy also demanded the representation of the nationalist community in the north by constitutional nationalist parties like the Social Democratic and Labour Party and, by challenging its electoral monopoly, Sinn Féin was destabilising the government’s plans (This is made very clear in ‘Revolutionary politics’ APRN April 25 1985, p2. See also ‘Ballots and bombs: electoral tactics complement armed struggle’ APRN February 18 1982, p1). SF portrayed itself as being socially radical and representing the interests of working class people, in contrast to the SDLP’s electoral pool of conservative, middle-aged and middle class voters.

Danny Morrison reassured the movement that tactical electoral intervention would not lead to constitutionalism and reformism: “Sinn Féin will be fighting the elections to consolidate republican support and build a revolutionary organisation which will defend the struggle, not a constitutional party to replace it.” The Provisional movement is not “going sticky”, “there is no parliamentary road to a united Ireland or socialism” and election results “cannot either prejudice the future or the primacy of armed struggle” (Peter Arnlis, ‘The war will go on’ APRN September 16 1982, pp6-7).

This was a fundamental point of principle. In 1984, Martin McGuinness stressed that it was “the combination of the Armalite and the ballot box” that would achieve victory, but made clear which was the weightier of the two: “The Irish Republican Army offers the only resolution to the present situation. It is their disciplined, well-directed war against British forces which will eventually bring Britain to withdraw. We know that elections, while important, … will not achieve a British withdrawal. If Sinn Féin were to win every election it contested, it would still not get an agreement on British withdrawal … We recognise the value and the limitations of electoral success. We recognise that only disciplined, revolutionary armed struggle by the IRA will end British rule” (‘We will
never be slaves again’ APRN June 28 1984, p7).

For his part, Gerry Adams declared that “to think that the British can be ‘talked out’ of Ireland is contemptible” (The politics of revolution: the main speeches and debates from the 1986 Sinn Féin ard-fheis, including the presidential address of Gerry Adams p11) and concluded: “The history of Ireland and of British colonial involvement throughout the world tells us that the British government rarely listens to the force of argument. It understands only the argument of force” (‘There is only one alternative’ APRN February 2 1989, pp8-9). But within a decade Sinn Féin and the IRA had totally abandoned such a stance, and gradually transformed themselves into a constitutional nationalist movement. How did this come about?

The first reason was that the leadership was intent on broadening the base of the movement, and was prepared to pay the price through a dilution of its radical socialist and later republican principles if necessary. It first made clear that the party was not going to be too radical, as this might scare off potential supporters who would be more conservative. When elected president of Sinn Féin in 1983, Gerry Adams declared: “We must be mindful of the dangers of ultra-leftism and remember at all times that, while our struggle has a major social and economic content, the securing of Irish independence is the prerequisite for the advance to a socialist republican society. Therefore … republicans have a duty to beware of any tendencies which would narrow our demands and our base. This is true not only of forces outside our movement, but also of tendencies within our party” (presidential address APRN November 17 1983, pp8-9).

The next stage was not just avoiding the dangers of being too far on the left - it was about abandoning any pretence of being socialist republican: “The republican struggle should not at this stage of its development style itself ‘socialist republican’. This would imply that there is no place in it for non-socialists” (G Adams The politics of Irish freedom p132). The excuse was that “This inevitably must narrow the potential support base of the republican movement and enable other movements to claim that they are ‘republican’ though they are not socialist: for example, Fianna Fáil or the SDLP” (G Adams Signposts towards independence and socialism Belfast 1988, p13).

Any principled leftwing position, in so far as it would narrow the support base of the movement, had to be rejected. Adams finally admitted in an interview: “I don’t think socialism is on the agenda at all at this stage except for political activists of the left” (Irish Times December 10 1986). The movement’s growth would be weakened if it could not rely on some conservative support.

If Adams understood the dangers of ultra-leftism, he certainly did not understand the dangers of opportunism. The movement’s growth was everything; the principles nothing. And the next target was not socialism, but republicanism itself: “We need to avoid ultra-republican positions” (G Adams Signposts towards independence and socialism Belfast 1988, p16). If the movement’s republicanism was too orthodox, it might not appeal to people who are simply nationalists. Ultimately, Sinn Féin would abandon republicanism all together to maximise the nationalist agenda. Republicanism was gradually diluted into nationalism.

Concerns about widening the base of the movement were closely related with that of widening its electoral support base. If the party wanted to become the majority nationalist party in the north and make considerable electoral progress in the south, it would have to increase its share of the vote, and appeal to people who are neither socialists nor republicans. Adams emphasised that the vote for Sinn Féin from 1982 to 1984 was a “principled republican vote, as opposed to a nationalist or catholic vote… it is ideologically sound … We have been stating our case bluntly and dogmatically, we have not been trying to be ‘all things to all men’ and our vote represents the people who came out in support of our position” (‘Steady progress and an injection of reality’ APRN 21 1984, pp2-3).

In a television interview, Adams even went so far as to say that it might be a bad idea to overtake the SDLP electorally, as this might lead to a diminution of social radicalism. But, as the movement gradually transformed itself into a party of votes, it was less and less concerned about what is politically principled. For example, in 1985, SF decided to support women’s right to have abortion - only to reverse that position in 1986. This had less to do with abortion being immoral or wrong than with the opportunistic reason that it would go badly with the southern electorate in general and conservative nationalists in particular, and prevent the party getting more votes.

The objective increasingly became to win the votes of traditional middle class SDLP or Fianna Fáil voters. So a core socialist republican vote became a republican vote and finally a nationalist vote. A very revealing recent example of this was given in a report carried in An Phoblacht of the 2001 Westminster elections in West Tyrone. In the contest between the SDLP and Sinn Féin, there could be no doubt as to how the party represented itself:

“In the past days the enthusiastic reception canvassers have received ondoorsteps, including in staunch SDLP strongholds, have confirmed that Doherty’s support has never been so strong … ‘This constituency is overwhelmingly nationalist and it is nothing short of a disgrace that a unionist politician opposed to the peace process was elected last time,’ says Pat Doherty. ‘Now is the time for the nationalist people of West
Tyrone to rally around a party and a politician who will lead from the front to strengthen the peace process and effectively represent all the people of this constituency on the issues that matter the most, which include inward investment, transport infrastructure and demilitarisation.’ … Sinn Féin is seen … as the only nationalist party committed to negotiating further concessions on issues like policing and demilitarisation. But beyond the figures and the short-term considerations, the battle in West Tyrone is also a symbol of the direction nationalism is taking and the future of the Six Counties … The rise of Sinn Féin across the Six Counties will further confirm a trend of recent elections: Sinn Féin is the fastest growing party on the island and is becoming the largest nationalist party in the north” (my emphasis - ‘Pat Doherty to win West Tyrone’ APRN June 1 2001, p6).

From once opposing the ‘collaborationist’ and middle class SDLP, Sinn Féin now tries to replace the constitutional nationalist party and appeal to middle class and conservative voters.

Another reason for Sinn Féin’s evolution is that from the second half of the 1980s onward, central to the Provisionals’ strategy was the building of ‘broad fronts’. But the question is, on what political basis is the front built, who qualifies and how broad should it be? According to Adams, “We have to proceed on the basis of the lowest common denominator and at the level of people’s understanding” (G Adams Signposts towards independence and socialism Belfast 1988, p16). This means building fronts on so broad a basis that they can encompass everything from the catholic church to corporate Irish America.

In practice, the Provisionals sought to accommodate and build a ‘pan-nationalist alliance’ with Fianna Fáil, the catholic church - and the SDLP, instead of confronting them, as in the past: “Rather than denouncing the party, republicans should take a constructive approach with the SDLP” (‘Broadening the base’ APRN June 30 1988, p3). This could only but seriously weaken republicanism’s anti-partitionist thrust, as those elements have always been much more hostile to the IRA than to British involvement in Ireland.

When Sinn Féin did succeed in building such alliances, it was not on its own terms. It is not the Dublin government, the SDLP and the Clinton/Bush administration that have come to the republican position, but rather the Provisional movement which has moved to the constitutional nationalist position.

The price of the inclusion of republicans in the pan-nationalist alliance was the exclusion of republicanism. Sinn Féin has allowed those conservative elements to lead the whole nationalist struggle. Constitutional nationalism is the emphasis upon unity by consent, and republicanism has become subsumed within a partitionist nationalist project. The people who have always sold the struggle out are the people Sinn Féin was now relying on. Their aim was to effectively decommission republicanism, and they succeeded. The price of meetings with Clinton or Bush in the White House or of joint initiatives with the leadership of Fianna Fáil were ceasefires, unilateral acts of decommissioning and defeat.

When elected president of Sinn Féin, Gerry Adams expressed his support for the armed struggle of the IRA: “Armed struggle is a necessary and morally correct form of resistance in the Six Counties against a government whose presence is rejected by the vast majority of Irish people … There are those who tell us that the British government will not be moved by armed struggle. As has been said before, the history of Ireland and of British colonial involvement throughout the word tells us that they will not be moved by anything else” (presidential address APRN November 17 1983, pp8-9).

But electoralism was soon to take its toll on Sinn Féin’s commitment to support the primacy of armed struggle. In 1985, all Sinn Féin local election candidates had to sign a republican declaration giving unequivocal support to armed struggle. But after the British government introduced legislation making compulsory for anyone standing to reject proscribed organisations or illegal activities, the 1989 Sinn Féin ard fheis authorised councillors to sign up to this ‘anti-violence’ declaration. So, when it comes to a choice between votes and expressing support for the armed struggle of the IRA, the party chose electoralism. Sinn Féin had thus repudiated the Armalite in favour of the ballot box long before it signed up to the Mitchell principles.

In the meantime, SF faced the contradictions of ‘going into the state to overthrow the state’. In 1985, it decided that its elected representatives in the north would take their seats on local councils. An editorial in An Phoblacht promised: “Within the councils of the Six Counties, Sinn Féin elected representatives will challenge the basis of the state itself and that is why they are seen as a threat both by the loyalists and by the so-called ‘constitutional nationalists’” (‘No illusions’ APRN May 2 1985, p1). In theory, the republican objective was to overthrow the northern state. That was what the IRA armed struggle was about. But, while the IRA was bombing and destroying City Hall as a symbol of the state, Sinn Féin councillor were de facto accepting the state and trying to make it work by using it as a source of income, funding community initiatives, investment for social development projects, etc. Rather than providing an alternative structure to the state, as Adams had earlier envisaged in his jail writings, Sinn Féin was now susceptible to cooption by the state.

A few years later, it was evident that Sinn Féin’s attitude towards the state had evolved: “As one Sinn Féin councillor observed, ‘The loyalists and the council officials were genuinely apprehensive of Sinn Féin in the council chamber, but within a short period of time they saw that we were genuine and reasonable” (‘Advancing under attack - Sinn Féin in the council chambers’ APRN March 2 1989, pp8-9). The reason was that, for the purpose of running city councils, there were practically no differences between Sinn Féin and the other constitutionalist parties. Mairtin O Muilleor, a well known Belfast Sinn Féin councillor, admitted that, “When it comes to ‘bins, bodies and bogs’ (the normal issues at council meetings), we are only a few degrees to the left of the SDLP” (‘Broadening the base’ APRN June 30 1988, p3).

Brendan O Brien, the security correspondent for RTE who cannot be suspected of republican or leftwing sympathies, was one of the first who recognised the significance of this process: “In the 1970s, abstentionist republicans would never have considered ‘recognising’ Belfast City Hall. It was the bastion of unionism and of the British state. The republican movement would have none of it. They would insist on abstaining from the state until Britain was forced out through the IRA campaign … By 1993 Sinn Féin had 10 seats at Belfast City Hall and were looking ahead to a nationalist majority on the council. They were claiming it as their own, despite the union jack flying overhead and all the symbols of unionism and empire inside. This would have far-reaching implications for a movement which regarded itself not just as republican but revolutionary. They were joining the system, not tearing it down” (B O Brien The long war Dublin 1999, pp47-49).

Sinn Féin had de facto accepted the legitimacy of the state years before it signed up to the Belfast agreement. Unionist dominance of Belfast city council ended with the local government elections of 1997. The first Sinn Féin lord mayor of Belfast to be appointed was Alex Maskey for the year 2002-03. Photographs of him sitting with a union jack in his parlour and proudly wearing his mayor necklace would have been unthinkable two decades ago and symbolised how far Sinn Féin had accepted the institutions it was once pledged to overthrow (see B McCaffrey and A Maskey Man and mayor Belfast 2003).

This was also true of the recognition of the legitimacy of the southern parliament. The republican movement traditionally considered itself to be the legitimate government of Ireland, and the IRA the sole legitimate army. When elected as president of Sinn Féin, Adams stated: “On the question of Leinster House, we are an abstentionist party. It is not my intention to advocate a change in this situation.” He promised the delegates that he was not “about to lead you into Leinster House” (presidential address APRN November 17 1983, pp8-9).

The problem is that, once the legitimacy of the Dublin government is recognised, there cannot be two legitimate governments and two legitimate armies; one has to recognise that the official Irish army is the only legitimate army and that an illegal army is therefore illegitimate. The republican objective is to bring down Leinster House, not enter it. However, in 1986, in order to grow electorally in the south, the Provisionals dropped abstentionism and recognised its legitimacy.

Denying that the current leadership “are intent on edging the republican movement on to a constitutional path”, Martin McGuinness then declared: “I can give a commitment on behalf of the leadership that we have absolutely no intention of going to Westminster or Stormont … Our position is clear and it will never, never, never change. The war against British rule must continue until freedom is achieved … We will lead you to the republic”(The politics of revolution - the main speeches and debates from the 1986 Sinn Féin ard fheis, including the presidential address of Gerry Adams pp26-27).

Eight years later, the ‘war against British rule’ was over, and five years after that Martin McGuinness was a British minister of education in the Stormont assembly …

RIRA pronounced proscribed

Daily Ireland

British Lords say Real IRA illegal

House of Lords judges have ruled that the Real IRA is a proscribed organisation within the terms of the Terrorism Act.
Thursday’s judgment was delivered in London and upholds a decision made in June last year by Belfast High Court.
Belfast solicitor Kevin Winters said it was “an unsatisfactory way to resolve this matter”.
“In our view, this is a classic example of the judiciary giving effect to what parliament had really intended but had failed to legislate,” he said.
The case resulted from the collapse of membership charges against four Co Tyrone men in connection with other alleged offences at Coalisland in February 2002.
Mr Justice Girvan ruled during the men’s trial last May that the Real IRA was not specifically proscribed under the Terrorism Act. In June 2004, the Crown appealed against this ruling to the North’s Court of Appeal. A three-member panel, led by Lord Chief Justice Brian Kerr, upheld the appeal.
Legal representatives for one of the acquitted men were granted leave to challenge the issue in the House of Lords. The five-member House of Lords panel ruled that the Real IRA was an illegal organisation under the Terrorism Act.
Lord Carswell said in his decision: “By the time that the 2000 act was passed, the Real IRA was in active being and the Omagh bombing had been attributed to it.
“It is inconceivable that parliament did not intend to proscribe it. It is in my view entirely clear that the words ‘Irish Republican Army’ were intended as an umbrella term, capable of describing all manifestations or splinter groups.”

By Jarlath Kearney

RIRA expels 7 in Creggan area

Daily Ireland

Real IRA in cartel claim

by Eamonn Houston
e.houston@dailyireland.com

The Real IRA has expelled seven alleged drug dealers from the Creggan area of Derry, it was revealed yesterday.
The group claimed to have routed a drugs cartel on the estate. According to sources close to the organisation, a Catholic priest was presented with a list on Tuesday, containing the names of several alleged drug dealers operating in the Creggan estate.
Using intermediaries, the Real IRA submitted a list of alleged drug dealers to St Mary’s Catholic Church in Creggan.
The message and the list indicated that seven alleged drug dealers would be killed if they did not leave the city.
Fr Seán McKenna, administrator of St Mary’s, confirmed last night that clergy in the area had relayed the threat to the relevant families.
“The message was passed on that lives were in danger. I think that there is a serious drugs problem in every town and village in Ireland and I think that we are in denial over this fact.
“I don’t think that people being ‘put out’ or threatened helps the matter. I also understand that the parents of children do not want their offspring exposed to drugs and drug dealing,” said Fr McKenna.
Eamonn McCann, of the Socialist Environmental Alliance, yesterday said the Real IRA was trying to win credibility in the massive nationalist estate.
“We make the same point about the Real IRA as we have recently made about others — that it’s a tiny step from ‘punishing’ people in the name of the community to punishing anyone who challenges attempts to dominate the community.
“The activity threatened by the Real IRA in Creggan has nothing to do with achieving a political objective, whether this be a united Ireland or anything else. The objective is to establish the group as an organisation to be feared.
“The Real IRA threat comes at a time when the Provisional IRA is reported to be conducting an internal debate on effective disbandment. This has been prompted by pressure from hypocrites like Mitchell Reiss and Tony Blair.
“But the SEA says that the reason paramilitary groups should disband is that they have become a hindrance to free debate on how working-class communities can move forward.”
In a separate development, the PSNI was yesterday probing a shooting on the Creggan estate during which shots where fired through the bedroom window of a home in the Melmore Gardens area shortly after midnight.
The PSNI said four people had been in the house at the time, including a young girl. None of the occupants were injured.
A PSNI spokesman said: “Police are keeping an open mind as to the motive at this stage and would appeal to anyone who witnessed the attack or who may have information to contact detectives at Strand Road.”

Robert Hamill collusion inquiry

Daily Ireland

Second collusion enquiry to get underway at Craigavon

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click to view - Robert Hamill

The sister of Portadown man Robert Hamill, who was killed in a sectarian attack eight years ago, last night appealed for help to resolve the case.
It was announced yesterday that a public inquiry into Mr Hamill’s killing will formally commence next Tuesday.
Speaking to Daily Ireland, Mr Hamill’s sister Diane called on anyone with information about the killing or the subsequent investigation to come forward.
Father of two (his partner was pregnant with their third child), Mr Hamill was 25-years-old when he was kicked to death by a loyalist mob on April 27, 1997.
The failure of a nearby RUC patrol to intervene during the attack, alongside the handling of the RUC investigation, led to allegations of collusion in Mr Hamill’s case being considered by Canadian judge Peter Cory.
Judge Cory recommended the need for a public inquiry, which will now proceed at Craigavon courthouse.
Diane Hamill yesterday paid tribute to solicitor Rosemary Nelson, who represented the Hamill family before she was murdered by loyalist paramilitaries in March, 1999.
An inquiry investigating state collusion in Mrs Nelson’s case, which was also recommended by Judge Cory, began in Craigavon last month.
Ms Hamill also urged the public to continue supporting the family of murdered Belfast solicitor Pat Finucane in their sixteen-year-old battle to secure truth and justice.
“We’re so far supportive of the inquiry that’s about to begin, but we are also nervous about it,” Ms Hamill said.
The family of Pat Finucane have refused to endorse the enquiry into his death being proposed by the British Government, branding it neither public nor transparent.

By Jarlath Kearney

Adams: Agreement only way forward

Sinn Féin

Adams - Only way forward is through the Good Friday Agreement

Published: 22 May, 2005

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Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams speaking in Belfast this morning said “The DUP leader Ian Paisley declared recently that the Good Friday Agreement is dead. The reality, acknowledged by the Taoiseach on Friday, is that any move forward in this post-election period has to be bedded in the Good Friday Agreement and in the acceptance by the DUP of the Agreement’s core principles.”

Mr. Adams said:

“In the negotiations at the end of last year Sinn Fein insisted that the core principles and fundamentals of the Good Friday Agreement had to be defended. As a result the DUP moved reluctantly to accept the fundamentals of the Agreement, which was expressed in those elements of the Comprehensive Agreement published by the two governments last December, which dealt with the Good Friday Agreement.

“The DUP leader Ian Paisley declared recently that the Good Friday Agreement is dead. The reality, acknowledged by the Taoiseach on Friday, is that any move forward in this post-election period has to be bedded in the Good Friday Agreement and in the acceptance by the DUP of the Agreement’s core principles. These include:

· Power-sharing government on the basis of the d’Hondt formula;

· Working with Sinn Fein in the Executive and in the joint office of the First and Deputy First Ministers;

· Full participation in the other institutions established under the Good Friday Agreement including the all-Ireland Ministerial Council;

· The transfer of powers on policing and justice to the Executive;

· Developing the all-Ireland institutions;

· Accepting the need for equality and human rights;

· Measures to counter sectarianism and racism;

· Using their influence to remove all guns from society, including the weapons of Ulster Resistance.

“There is now an unprecedented opportunity to move forward. But this can only be achieved on the basis of equality, inclusion and mutual respect. The DUP can be part of the process of change or they can opt out. But they cannot veto progress. If they do not come on board, then the responsibility falls to the two governments s to make progress with the parties who are committed to the Agreement and to moving forward in partnership and co-operation.

“Obviously there must be a little space to allow the governments to make this clear to the DUP and to prepare the way forward. This has to include preparations to ensure the Orange Marching season is peaceful. The DUP has a role to play in this. So too do the Loyal Orders. But the main responsibility lies with both governments. They have to ensure that people can live free from sectarian harassment. This includes freedom from contentious parades.”ENDS

Orangeman Bobby Saulters

Sunday Life

Orange Grand Master faces court action

By Alan Murray
22 May 2005

ORANGE Order Grand Master Bobby Saulters could be hauled before the courts - for taking part in an illegal parade in east Belfast.

The possible prosecution of the order’s figurehead has added to growing tensions between Orangemen and the Parades Commission and police, over this summer’s marching season.

Mr Saulters is one of a number of prominent Orangemen whose names are included in a file being prepared by police, which has examined the circumstances surrounding the parade in February, which commemorated the murder of two UDR soldiers in 1988.

Mr Saulters took part in the parade to the city-centre, where east Belfast soldier, Frederick Starrett and his colleague James Cummings, from Rathcoole, were killed by an IRA bomb, which detonated as they closed security gates.

Both soldiers were members of the Orange Order.

The Ballymacarrett District refused to comply with a Parades Commission rule to nominate only one officer as the parade organiser, and were warned by a senior police officer that they were breaking the law.

A spokesman for the commission said that the East Belfast District refused to nominate just one officer on each parade application - effectively making all their marches illegal.

He said: “The Order submitted a number of names on the 11/1 form and that does not comply with the law in the United Kingdom.

“Because they did not comply with the law, we could not adjudicate on the parade and, therefore, it was an unlawful parade.”

Two members of the district have already been charged over a parade in east Belfast last July, when bands played The Sash outside St Matthew’s Catholic Church.

With more senior Orangemen expected to be charged over the February parade, tensions over the parades issue have risen in the area.

From last week, the Order has become responsible for the conduct of all people attending, or following, parades under the new Processions Act 2005.

Lodges and districts must advise police of the number of supporters they expect will follow parades.

Said one senior Orangeman: “How do we know how many people will line every street?

“This is just adding to the difficulties we are facing over parades and adding to the tension.

“We’re not prepared to see one individual in every district or lodge singled out for prosecution. There are many people involved in organising any parade.

“We are prepared to submit the names of several people who are actually involved in organising parades, but the Parades Commission won’t accept this.”

slnews@belfasttelegraph.co.uk

Jim Gray

Sunday Life

Insight into the world of a UDA terror boss

By Darwin Templeton UTV Insight
22 May 2005

IT’S a heart-warming display of friendship that was shattered by ruthless paramilitary terror and tragedy.

On a street in east Belfast in 1983, proud fathers Jim Gray and Len McCreery pose happily with their young sons.

In the years that followed, Gray became a UDA ‘brigadier’, while the terror group sentenced his old friend to death.

Len McCreery’s son, Leon, was slashed and almost beaten to death by a UFF gang, while his father was in jail.

And Jonathan Gray - just six months old in the photo - died suddenly when only 19 years old.

Tomorrow night, Len McCreery, now 51, breaks cover to tell UTV Insight about his relationship with Gray. It broke down in 1992, when the UFF murdered his brother and one-time brigadier, Ned, accusing him of being an informer.

In 1999, McCreery tried to kill a UDA man - and became a marked man. Even in jail, he had to be held in segregation for his own safety, but the UFF turned on his family.

Leon was lucky to survive a vicious knife attack in which he sustained 180 stitches.

“They were actually going to murder my son. They were going to shoot him dead,” he says.

Tragedy struck Gray himself in March 2002, Jonathan Gray - known as JJ - died while on holiday in Thailand.

His mother, Anne Tedford, tells Insight she still doesn’t know the full story - but suspects a drugs link.

The UTV show charts the rise and fall of Jim Gray, who’s now in Maghaberry on money-laundering charges.

Detectives have frozen his assets and are carrying out a snowballing international investigation into his affairs.

They’ve carried out more than 40 searches, seized computers and have amassed thousands of documents from banks, lawyers and accountants.

Michael Stone also fell foul of Gray and describes how he escaped with his life from a so-called “court martial” while UPRG supremo, Frankie Gallagher, details the rank-and-file revolt that led to Gray’s expulsion from the UDA.

The End of the Line - Insight, UTV, tomorrow, 8pm

Killer Stone to the rescue

Sunday Life

UFF hitman offers to meet Lisa’s killers

22 May 2005

CEMETERY killer Michael Stone last night offered to meet the evil killers of Lisa Dorrian.

The former UFF hitman told Sunday Life he would act as a ‘go-between’ in a bid to recover the Co Down woman’s body.

The pretty 25-year-old vanished, after being at a party in a Ballyhalbert caravan site, on February 28.

Stone made the offer after cops confirmed this week that loyalist paramilitaries - believed to be the LVF - were being linked to the murder.

But, the Dorrian family were last night shocked at the killer’s offer of help.

Said Lisa’s sister Joanne: “It just goes to show you how crazy the situation my family finds itself in.

“The only thing we know about someone like Michael Stone is what we read in the media - this is a world totally alien to ours.

“My mum said she would be willing to meet anyone if they had any information on thewhereabouts of Lisa’s body.

“We are begging people to help us, but we can’t comment on Michael Stone’s offer because we know nothing about him.”

The graveyard murderer said he would “go anywhere” to locate Lisa’s body.

Said Stone: “The people who abducted, murdered and have still not returned this young woman to her family, cannot be classed as true loyalists. It must be terrible what this family is going through.”

Loyalist attacks

BBC

Loyalists are blamed over attacks


Cars were burned out in the attacks

Homes and cars have been damaged in attacks in north Belfast, which police believe were sectarian and connected.

There were incidents in a number of areas, which nationalists have blamed on loyalists. Unionist politicians have condemned the attacks.

At 2300 BST a car in Cliftondene Crescent was destroyed by a petrol bomb and paint thrown at three houses.

Later on Friday, at Abbeydale Park, Ballysillan, a car was damaged and paint thrown at two houses.

Two properties at Ligoneil Road and one in Somerdale Park were attacked with paint. A car at Hazelwood Park in Newtownabbey was destroyed by a fire.

In the Cliftondene petrol bomb attack a taxi driver had her car badly damaged. Her 11-year-old son narrowly escaped injury when the windows of their house were smashed.

She did not want to give her name, but said that it had been a terrifying experience.


A taxi driver said it had been a terrifying experience

“The wee fella was screaming - all the glass was around him from the windows,” she said.

“I am here nearly four years and I’ve good neighbours here - Protestant and Catholic - nothing like this has ever happened before - never.”

Condemning the attacks, DUP assembly member Nelson McCausland said people should have the right to live in their homes without fear.

“It’s clear that since a number of attacks took place in one area on the same night, this was an orchestrated campaign and it’s totally unacceptable,” he said.

“As well as hurting the families attacked, these attacks damage the entire community and are to be deplored.”


“These sorts of attacks at this time of the year on the eve of the marching season follow a well worn path.”
Gerry Kelly
Sinn Fein

Sinn Fein assembly member Gerry Kelly said he believed the attacks were carried out by loyalist paramilitaries.

“These were clearly well planned and co-ordinated attacks and I have no doubt that they were carried out by one of the unionist paramilitary gangs,” he said.

“These sorts of attacks at this time of the year on the eve of the marching season follow a well worn path.

“It is clear that this latest wave of unionist intimidation has been timed to try and influence policy around forthcoming controversial parades in this area.”

The SDLP’s Pat Convery condemned the attacks and said many organisations and community leaders in the area had been working to build trust.

“It is bitterly disappointing to find that there are people out there working just as hard on an agenda of strife and bigotry,” he said.

Cars damaged

“Major trouble often begins with this type of organised sectarian vandalism.

“It is important that it be nipped in the bud this year, so I am calling on the police to step up patrols and be much more visible in areas where trouble-making gangs are known to operate.”

Meanwhile, in a separate incident in Glengormley, petrol bombs were thrown at two cars at Farmley Gardens.

One car was destroyed, while the other petrol bomb failed to ignite.

Police said three youths wearing baseball caps may have been involved in the Glengormley attacks, which happened at 0040 BST on Saturday.

Refugees from the Troubles

BBC

Seeking refuge from the Troubles

By Mary Campbell
BBC Northern Ireland

We think of refugees as people who flee from famine, war or persecution in far-flung corners of the world.

But some people who left Northern Ireland during the height of the Troubles share similar feelings of displacement and isolation.


The violence drove many people out of Northern Ireland

A new report examines the fate of people displaced during the years 1969-1994 - when violence and unrest in the province were at their worst.

It details the experiences of 32 people, who left Northern Ireland to live in the Republic of Ireland or abroad for different reasons.

Some feared prison and arrest or internment.

Some were on the run from the authorities, some fled because they feared they would be assassinated and some left because they could not cope with spiralling and often random violence.

The report was commissioned by Area Development Management and the Combat Poverty Agency within the European Union peace programme.

The fear which forced people to leave is still very real - many were even reluctant to give radio interviews because they were worried about being identified.

One man who was prepared to talk was Brian McKeown, who fled from County Tyrone to Cavan in the early 1980s.

He had just come out of prison where he had served seven years for firearms offences.

He had plans to get married and work in his brother’s engineering firm.

But he feared being implicated by an informer and he was warned by the authorities that details about him were in the hands of loyalist paramilitaries.

Twenty five years on, he is well settled in his adopted town of Cavan where he is now in his second term as a local Sinn Fein councillor and runs a very successful boxing club.

But it has been hard for him to find full-time work.

Once employers found out about his past, they were reluctant to keep him on because they feared they too might suffer repercussions.

“I made my bed, I have to lie on it,” he says, but maintains he has always been a political activist and had no military involvement.

Scale of displacement

Social policy analyst Pauline Conroy of Ralaheen Limited in Dublin said there were common experiences among all interviewees.

Many talked of family occasions such as christenings and funerals which they missed.

Many felt guilty because they believed they abandoned ageing parents or left a farm on which they loved to work.

One interviewee said he used to meet his brother every Sunday across the border in the Republic of Ireland to tell him what to do on the farm.

The study could locate few statistical sources which would permit making a strong estimate of the scale of displacement.

Displacement is defined as an involuntary movement, when people feel they have no choice but to move.


Some security force members left because of fears of attack

However, it makes a conservative estimate that of the 22,000 people born in Northern Ireland and living in border counties during the Troubles, approximately 11,000 are displaced persons.

The researchers believe many northern Protestants fled to Britain and particularly to Canada.

They talk of a Northern Ireland diaspora which now exists because of the Troubles.

Pauline Conroy recommends that similar studies should be carried out with these people.

The Fine Gael TD for the constituency of Cavan- Monaghan, Seymour Crawford, who contributed to the report, recalls meeting a woman on Prince Edward Island in Canada.

He knew by her accent that she was from Northern Ireland and as they chatted she told him she and her husband left because members of their family were in the security forces and they feared for their lives.

Sadly, her husband died from cancer a short time after they moved to Canada.

Mr Crawford cautions against creating a “victimisation culture”, but accepts that if exercises like the report help the hurt to heal, then they are worthwhile.






















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