SAOIRSE32

5/6/2005

Burn death

BreakingNews.ie

Man dies from burn injuries

05/06/2005 - 21:31:32

A man died today after being found with extensive burns in woods in Co Down.

The 43-year-old died in hospital several hours after being discovered in a wooded area of Bangor, known locally as Nicky’s Tomb.

Police said they were treating his death as suspicious.

A post-mortem examination is to be carried out tomorrow.

A PSNI spokeswoman said a murder investigation had not yet been mounted but the death was being treated as “suspicious”.

The name of the dead man has not been released by police.

Holy Cross

Daily Ireland

Priest slams Collins’ claim

“I am very angry but not surprised. A perception exists among people like Colonel Collins that anyone who stands up and demands civil rights for nationalists is in the IRA.”
–Martin Morgan–

by Ciarán Barnes

A Belfast priest has accused a prominent former British army commander of putting the lives of his parishioners in danger.
Ardoyne priest Fr Aidan Troy was speaking after Lieutenant Colonel Tim Collins had claimed in his new book, Rules of Engagement, that community representatives in the Ardoyne area of north Belfast were “Provisional IRA to a man”.


Fr Aidan Troy

Colonel Collins, who commanded British troops during the Iraq war in 2003, made his comments in reference to the 2001 Holy Cross dispute.
Hundreds of loyalists from the Protestant Glenbryn estate protested for six weeks along the Catholic primary pupils’ route to school, shouting sectarian abuse at the girls and their parents.
Loyalist paramilitaries also threw a blast bomb and other missiles at the pupils.

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
click to view CRAZYFENIAN’s photo of Holy Cross mural

During every day of the protest, Fr Troy accompanied the children, aged between five and 11, on their walk to and from school. The dispute ended after a series of meetings between Ardoyne community representatives and loyalist leaders.
Fr Troy told Daily Ireland yesterday the soldier’s comments were “highly dangerous”.
He said: “If I made comments like that about the protesters from Glenbryn, I would have to take responsibility if something happened to them.
“Throughout the Holy Cross dispute, I was careful not to label people.
“The situation wasn’t about politics or paramilitarism. It was about the rights of children to attend school. Anyone who misses that point has no understanding of Holy Cross.”
Martin Morgan, a former Belfast mayor and SDLP councillor for the Ardoyne area at the time of the Holy Cross protests, said of Colonel Collins’ comments: “I am very angry but not surprised. A perception exists among people like Colonel Collins that anyone who stands up and demands civil rights for nationalists is in the IRA.
“But how dare he insinuate that so publicly about the people of Ardoyne.”
Although Colonel Collins is critical of Ardoyne community workers, he does pay tribute to Fr Troy’s ability to break through institutional sectarianism.
He also refers to how members of the British army sent into Ardoyne at the time had connections to loyalist paramilitary organisations
Colonel Collins left the British army last year. His departure was marred by claims that his units had mistreated Iraqi prisoners. The soldier was later cleared of allegations of war crimes. Colonel Collins was unavailable for comment yesterday.
His book was published this week. Another claim in it is that a rifle found by his troops during an operation in Africa had been used by British soldiers in Derry on Bloody Sunday. He said the weapon had been declared destroyed when the Saville inquiry asked where it was.

Missing Magherafelt girl

BreakingNews.ie

Concern grows for missing 16-year-old in Co Antrim

05/06/2005 - 17:58:44

Police in the North said today that they are becoming increasingly concerned about a 16 year old girl who has been missing from her home in Magherafelt in Co Antrim since Friday.

They believe Laura Jameson may be in Larne or Newtownabbey.

She is described as being 5’ 10” in height, and of slim build, with dark hair and eyes.

Adams to DUP: Talk to SF

BreakingNews.ie

Adams throws down talks challenge to unionists

05/06/2005 - 18:38:33

Sinn Féin president Gerry Adams tonight challenged the Democratic Unionist Party to take the “difficult” decision to enter dialogue with republicans.

He said the Rev Ian Paisley’s party might find it “a very uninviting prospect”, but their current position of not negotiating with Sinn Féin was not sustainable.

Mr Adams said he awaited a positive response from the IRA to his appeal for them to declare a purely non-violent democratic future – and said there was now an unprecedented opportunity to make political progress in Northern Ireland.

In a direct message to the DUP, he said their electoral successes had given them the leadership of unionism and they could not opt out of their responsibilities .

“Their increased mandate brings with it increased responsibility and an imperative to deliver for their electorate. The DUP needs to engage in a meaningful way in the political process and that means engaging, negotiating and talking with Sinn Féin,” said Mr Adams.

He conceded: “The DUP may find that is a very uninviting prospect,” adding: “We can all find excuses not to engage.”

Sinn Féin, said Mr Adams in a statement, recognised and respected the DUP’s mandate and knew that a necessary element of any conflict resolution process was the primacy of inclusive, unconditional dialogue.

That demanded a serious, good faith effort to engage with political opponents, he said.

“Dialogue with political opponents may be difficult, as much for Sinn Féin as for the DUP, but dialogue is the only way forward, the only way to build a lasting peace.

“The public position of the DUP is unsustainable. At some point the DUP will have to enter the world of real politics. How else do they hope to deliver for their electorate?”

If the DUP did not want a return to the political institutions of the Good Friday Agreement, that was their choice and they could refuse to participate, he said.

But the unionists could not stop the process of change – they could only “play for time and slow it down”.

Asking if that was what unionism was reduced to, he said the unprecedented opportunity to make progress required confidence, courage and leadership that was the challenge facing the DUP.

James Connolly

An Phoblacht

Today marks the anniversary of James Connolly’s birth

James Connolly: Remembering the Past

BY SHANE Mac THOMÁIS

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us
Click to view photo: James Connolly

James Connolly was born at 107, the Cowgate, Edinburgh. His parents, John and Mary Connolly, had emigrated to Edinburgh from County Monaghan in the 1850s. His father worked as a manure carter, removing dung from the streets at night, and his mother was a domestic servant who suffered from chronic bronchitis and died when Connolly was just a boy.

James attended St Patrick’s School in the Cowgate, with his two older brothers. At ten years of age, he left school and got a job with Edinburgh’s Evening News, where he worked as a ‘Devil’, cleaning inky rollers. In 1882, aged 14, he joined the British Army in which he was to remain for nearly seven years, all of it in Ireland

While serving in Ireland, he met his future wife, a Protestant named Lillie Reynolds. They were engaged in 1888 and the following year Connolly discharged himself from the British Army and went back to Scotland. In 1890, he and Lillie Reynolds were wed in Perth.

In the spring of 1890, James and Lillie moved to Edinburgh and lived at 22 West Port, where he joined his father and brother, working as casual labourers and then as a manure carter with Edinburgh Corporation.

Connolly became active in socialist and trade union circles and became secretary of the Scottish Socialist Federation. During this time, he also became involved with the Independent Labour Party, which Kier Hardie had formed in 1893.

In late 1894, Connolly lost his job with the corporation. He opened an unsuccessful cobbler’s shop in February 1895 at number 73 Bucclevch Street. At the invitation of the Scottish Socialist, John Leslie, he visited Dublin in May 1896. James and Lillie Connolly and their three daughters, Nora, Mona and Aideen, set sail for Dublin in 1896, where he founded the Irish Socialist Republican Party in May of that year.

In 1898, Connolly had to return to Scotland on a lecture and fundraising tour. Before he left Ireland, he had founded The Workers’ Republic newspaper, the first Irish socialist paper, from his house at number 54 Pimlico, where he lived with his wife and three daughters. Six other families, a total of 30 people, also lived in number 54 Pimlico, at the same time.

In 1902, he went on a five-month lecture tour of the United States and returned to Edinburgh, where he worked for the Scottish District of the Social Democratic Federation.

He then chaired the inaugural meeting of the Socialist Labour Party in 1903 but, when his party failed to make any headway, Connolly became disillusioned and in September 1903 he emigrated to the US. There, he founded the Irish Socialist Federation in New York, and another newspaper, The Harp.

In 1910, he returned to Ireland and in June of the following year he became Belfast organiser for the Irish Transport and General Workers’ Union. In 1913, he co-founded the Labour Party and in 1914 he organised, with James Larkin, opposition to the Employers’ Federation in the Great Lock Out of workers. That year, 1913, had also seen Connolly co-found the Irish Citizen Army. When Larkin left on a fundraising tour of the United States in 1914, where he was arrested and sentenced to ten years in prison for his political activities, Connolly became Acting General Secretary of the ITGWU.

That same year, millions of workers went off to be slaughtered in the First World War, Connolly was devastated. All over Europe, even socialists succumbed to the poison of jingoism, joining the war efforts in their respective countries and thus heralding the end of the Second International, in which various socialist parties and figures had vowed to rail against the war and the slaughter of worker by worker.

The British Government attempted to buy off Irish sentiment in support of outright independence from the Empire with a Home Rule Bill

It was now that Connolly’s position shifted with regard to physical force. Previously, he had wanted no part in it, eschewing it as reckless and contrary to the orthodox Marxist doctrine of a mass revolution of the working class, whereby consciousness precedes action. But with the retreat of the European socialists, and the failure of the trade unions to act against the war, Connolly despaired of ever achieving the society he had dedicated his life to without armed struggle.

The IRB was planning just the kind of insurrection Connolly had in mind. He had taken a dim view of the IRB and its leaders up until then. However, when he heard their plans, he agreed to join them with his own Irish Citizen Army Volunteers.

Connolly was in command of the GPO during Easter Week, and was severely wounded. He was arrested and court-martialled following the surrender. On 9 May 1916, James Connolly was propped up in bed before a court-martial and sentenced to die by firing squad — he was at that time being held in the military hospital in Dublin Castle. In a leading article in the Irish Independent on 10 May, William Martin Murphy, who had led the employers during the 1913 Lock Out, urged the British Government to execute Connolly.

At dawn on 12 May, James Connolly was taken by ambulance from Dublin Castle to Kilmainham Jail, carried on a stretcher into the prison yard, strapped into a chair in a corner of the yard and executed by firing squad

When news of the Rising was released, many European socialists dismissed it as a putsch of little or no great consequence. However, Lenin refuted those criticisms in his article, The Results of the Discussion on Self-Determination.

“Those who can term such a rising a Putsch are either the worst kind of reactionaries or hopeless doctrinaires, incapable of imagining the social revolution as a living phenomenon,” he wrote.

On 5 June 1868, 137 years ago, James Connolly was born.

McDowell: Come baaaack to the Tribunal

RTE News

Families urged to return to Morris Tribunal

05 June 2005 16:32

The Minister for Justice, Michael McDowell, has appealed to the McBrearty and McConnell families to return to the Morris Tribunal.

Both families withdrew from the tribunal in April, in protest at the fact that the State would not guarantee their legal costs would be met.

The tribunal only awards legal costs at the end of each module, and then only to those who it believes co-operated with the inquiry.

Speaking on RTÉ’s This Week programme, Mr McDowell said the families’ legal teams would be paid promptly but only in arrears.

The minister also said he would not resign in light of the tribunal’s findings of corruption and negligence among some gardaí in Donegal.

Meanwhile, Frank Mc Brearty Senior has responded to the Minister’s remarks by asking him to take part in a public debate on the Morris tribunal.

Mr McBrearty said he had been forced to remove his lawyers from the Morris tribunal after their costs ran to €1 million.

He said his lawyers will have to wait a considerable amount of time before they are paid, as their costs have to come before the taxing master in the High Court.

This just in from ’senior security sources’

Sunday Life

As always, the Belfast Telegraph knows absolutely everything about anything ‘republican’

Real IRA form new unit in Armagh

Exclusive by Stephen Breen
05 June 2005

DIE-HARD renegade republicans have formed a new terror cell in north Armagh, it was claimed last night.

Senior security sources told Sunday Life that the Craigavon-based Real IRA unit has vowed to unleash a new wave of violence in the area.

Sources claimed the group was formed because of growing disillusionment with the IRA’s peace strategy.

It is believed the gang have secured weapons and recruited members - including teenagers, in the Lurgan area.

It is also understood former members of the shadowy Catholic Reaction Force have joined its ranks.

Although they have not launched any attacks on the security forces, they have been blamed for a number of paramilitary-style attacks.

Security sources fear the terror group will step up its campaign over the upcoming marching season.

Sources also claim the Real IRA, which was responsible for the 1998 Omagh bomb outrage, is set to step up attacks against known criminals in the area.

Said the source: “The Provos appear to have lost support in north Armagh heartlands because of their involvement in the peace process.

“People are turning to dissidents to help, because the IRA tells them it is a crucial time for them and they can’t be seen to be getting involved in disputes.

“The Continuity IRA was previously strong in the area, but it’s the Real IRA who is now at the forefront now.

“They have a lot of new members but also experienced terrorists, who are willing to carry on the campaign of violence.

“The word in the areas is that they got new weapons and are prepared to use them.”

Upper Bann DUP MP David Simpson expressed concern about the RIRA threat.

He said: “The security forces must take the threats of dissident republican very seriously.

“It’s essential they have the resources to deal with it.”

McDonagh down!

BreakingNews.ie

**If you will register free at the New Ballymun - Regeneration and Demolition website, you can view some absolutely AWESOME photographs of the tower demolitions. They are amazing!

Tower block demolished in Ballymun

05/06/2005 - 13:37:15

Image Hosted by ImageShack.us
McDonagh implosion - photo from this cool website: New Ballymun - Regeneration and Demolition

More than 30 years after it was built, another of the Ballymun towers was reduced to rubble today in the latest stage of the area’s regeneration.

Minister of State Noel Ahern, who was in Ballymun, Dublin, to lead the count-down to the controlled implosion of the 15-storey block of flats, said it was “another symbolic day” for the area.

The Minister said: “The demolition of the McDonagh Tower will allow for the construction of the new Civic Plaza, which will make a huge difference to the landscape of the main street.”

Mr Ahern said the plan was to give the area social, physical and economic regeneration, which would attract people into the area, create a mixture of social and private housing and generate employment.

He said local residents were being consulted on a permanent way to remember the signatories of the 1916 Proclamation, after whom the seven 15-storey towers were named.

The Minister of State was joined for the detonation by Muriel McAuley, grand-daughter of Thomas McDonagh - after whom the tower was named - and her eight-year-old grandson Oscar McAuley.

There was a 30-minute delay to the implosion after concerns were raised that somebody had been seen inside the exclusion zone mounted around the block of flats.

Then there were cheers as the 42-metre, 8,500-tonne building crashed down, covering spectators in a cloud of dust, but leaving the newly-built axis civic centre intact just eight metres away.

McDonagh Tower is the ninth of the Ballymun flat blocks to be demolished and the second to be destroyed by controlled implosion.

The 90 families who lived in McDonagh Tower have already moved into their new homes in the area.

One former resident who gave birth to one of her sons on the 14th floor of the tower block 30 years ago said the building had many memories for her.

Kay Cullen, who now lives in Poppintree, said she thought conditions for local residents were improving.

“It’s a great thing for the children in the area.

“Improvements are being made, we just have to keep working at it.”

She said she hoped to be able to keep a piece of rock from the demolished building to give to her son, who now lived in one of the new houses built as part of the regeneration.

“I can’t believe 30 years has gone,” she added.

All seven 15-storey tower blocks, 19 eight-storey blocks and 10 four-storey blocks of flats in Ballymun are being demolished to make way for community buildings, commercial properties and 5,000 new homes.

Anne Kirwan, who used to live in Ballymun, was at the implosion with her daughter and grandchildren.

“Ballymun was very good in the beginning, it was only in the later years it was actually let run down.”

“It has the potential to be good if they put in facilities for the young people. There’s a lot of new families and if they don’t put in facilities they’re back to square one,” she said.

Her daughter Sharon Kirwan said: “It’s hard to tell at this stage as there’s so much building and construction but hopefully it will be very good.”

In the place of the McDonagh tower, the new Civic Plaza will be unveiled in March 2006 and will feature a 900-square-metre glass map of Ballymun, marking the sites of 600 trees donated by individuals and planted throughout the area.

Murder accused not ‘Jock’ Davison

Examiner

**I am printing this story from yesterday, found at News Hound because there is a story written by SHAWN POGATCHNIK which is circulating all over the world with the headline ‘Reputed IRA Vet Arraigned on Murder Charge’ and confusing ‘Jock’ Davison with his uncle Terry Davison, who is the one accused of the McCartney murder.

Pub bouncer to be charged with McCartney murder

By John Breslin and Eddie Cassidy
04/06/05

A PUB bouncer will be charged today with the murder of Belfast man Robert McCartney while a senior IRA figure will face an attempted murder charge in relation to a separate attack on Mr McCartney’s friend, Brendan Devine.

Terry Davidson, 49, who worked as door security at Magennis’s bar, will face a murder charge.

He is an uncle of Brendan ‘Jock’ Davidson, a senior Sinn Féin member, who admitted to being in Magennis’s bar when Mr McCartney, 33, was dragged outside before being beaten and stabbed to death in an alleyway.

The man who will be charged with the attempted murder of Mr Devine is Jim McCormick, 36, a prominent member of the Republican movement in the Markets and Short Strand area.

The family of Mr McCartney, who have campaigned on both sides of the Atlantic for justice, last night welcomed the decision by the PSNI to charge the two men, arrested earlier this week in Belfast and Birmingham.

However, insisting that more than 15 people were involved in the murder, Mr McCartney’s sister Catherine said: “We will not be happy until everyone is brought to account for what they did to Robert on that night.”

It is believed the breakthrough in the four-month investigation followed new evidence from a passing motorist who identified a number of people involved in the attacks on January 30.

Both accused are due to appear before a magistrate in Belfast this morning.

The killing of Mr McCartney led to a public and political outcry against the IRA and Sinn Féin.

Shortly after the murder, three members of the IRA allegedly involved in the incidents were expelled from the organisation.

Mr McCartney and Mr Devine had been drinking together in the bar when a row broke out. Mr McCartney was taken outside where he was beaten and stabbed.

Catherine McCartney said last night she was pleased with the breakthrough.

“We hope it will lead to further arrests because there were more than two people involved. We still have a long way to go in terms of a trial and convictions,” she said.

Baby needs transplant to live

Belfast Telegraph

Ulster transplant tot ’stable’
Family still waiting for donor

By Nigel Gould, Health Correspondent
ngould@belfasttelegraph.co.uk
04 June 2005

The Ulster baby who is desperately waiting for a life-saving liver transplant operation was last night still in intensive care in a top UK children’s hospital.

Eight-month-old Erin Nicks’s condition was described by a spokeswoman at the Birmingham Children’s Hospital as “stable”.

The little girl from Whitecross in Co Armagh is critically ill with many complications from liver disease.

Her father Simon said they desperately hoped a donor could be found, as she had stopped breathing a few days ago.

Mr Nicks said his daughter was born healthy but, after six weeks, blood tests picked up a problem.

“Since then, it has been a constant stream of hospitals and medicine and speaking to consultants and doctors,” he said.

“Now, we’re hopefully at the final stage for we are awaiting a liver transplant.”

Mr Nicks said he was hopeful of finding a donor.

“You have good days and bad days but I am very hopeful,” he said.

More than 6,000 people in the UK are waiting for an organ transplant, according to figures from the NHS.

No fewer than 262 people across Northern Ireland are currently waiting for a donor organ.

Most are waiting for a kidney, others for a lung or liver transplant.

During 2003, 212 people from Northern Ireland were among almost 3,000 patients across the UK given a new lease of life through an organ transplant, due to the generosity of donors and their families.

Anyone who wants to sign up to the NHS Organ Donor Register can call 0845 60 60 400.

Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome
Theme designed by Jay of onefinejay.com