SAOIRSE32

9/7/2005

Bomb found inside police station

BBC

A bomb has been defused at a police station in County Tyrone.

Army technical officers carried out a controlled explosion on a suspicious object in Coalisland. Police later said it had been a “viable device”.

It was found on Saturday just inside the fencing at the station. Its remains have been taken away for forensic examination.

Some premises were evacuated during the security alert which began following a telephone bomb warning to a newsroom.

The area is getting back to normal after being cordoned off.

Anyone who saw any suspicious activity just after midnight on Saturday is urged to contact the police at Dungannon.

UDA-linked Group To Distribute ‘Anti-police’ Leaflets

Derry Journal

Friday 8th July 2005

The Derry branch of the Ulster Political Research Group (UPRG) is to press ahead with plans to distribute 5,000 leaflets urging local Protestants to report police ‘harassment’.

Local PSNI chiefs have branded the leaflets - entitled “Policing in Londonderry - A Community Matter” - as ‘anti-police’.

The flyer includes a questionnaire asking respondents if they have ever suffered police harassment.

The handout also urges anyone claiming maltreatment to report their cases to the URPG, Police Ombudsman, the city’s District Policing Partnership (DPP), the Protestant Interface group (PIN) or a solicitor.

Contact details for all groups are included in the leaflet.

The leaflet also asks respondents if they have ever been physically attacked by a police officer, if their homes have been raided or if they have been stopped and searched.

A PSNI spokesman said the leaflet put a Waterside partnership programme involving police and community leaders at risk.

However, the UPRG - which has links to the UDA –denied the police assertion, insisting Protestants were keen to work with police on a range of issues including tackling anti-social behaviour, on-street drinking and interface tensions.

UPRG spokesman David Nicholl added that police, “like all other organisations”, had a duty to “face facts” and remove a minority of “troublemakers” from its ranks.

Mr. Nicholl said residents in unionist areas of Derry were of the opinion that police were more ” heavyhanded” in dealing with young Protestants compared to youths in Catholic areas.

Mr. Nicholl said 50 “trial” leaflets were distributed two weekends ago outside pubs and clubs.

“As a result, two fresh complaints, relating to incidents in Lincoln Courts and Nelson Drive, which otherwise would not have come to light, have been made to the Ombudsman,” he said.

He insisted the UPRG would go ahead with a door-todoor drop of 5,000 leaflets. However, this will not take place until after July 12.

He also cautioned police against withdrawing from a local partnership programme which allows officers to contact community representatives in the event of trouble.

A PSNI spokesman insisted police had not withdrawn from the scheme which has been upandrunning for three years.

“We are considering our position, but these leaflets are anti-police and very unhelpful in terms of undermining the good relationship between the community and the police,” said a PSNI spokesman.

Loyalist ‘Hardmen’ Blamed For Limavady Road Flags

Derry Journal

Friday 8th July 2005

Loyalist ‘HARDMEN’ are being blamed for erecting “intimidating” Union and Ulster flags along a stretch of main road in Derry’s Waterside.

Residents living in the mixed Limavady Road area are said to be furious at the proliferation of flags - including the Orange Order standard –close to their homes.

One resident, who asked not to be named, told the ‘Journal’ this week: “Homeowners, both Protestants and Catholic, are really angry at the erection of these flags.

“They send out the message that this area is controlled by loyalists –which couldn’t be further from the truth.

“I know some people will say that they’ve been put up because the main county Orange parade is taking place in the city this year.

“That simply doesn’t wash. In previous years, when Derry hosted the main parade, I cannot recall such a proliferation of flags on the Limavady Road.

“Indeed, it’ll be interesting to see if the flags are removed once July 12 is over.”

The resident also expressed concern at the “message” the flags send out to people visiting the city.

“For example, I know that some of the games in the Foyle Cup are being played at nearby St. Columb’s Park - what must our international visitors being saying to themselves when they see this type of display?”

The homeowner also accused the authorities of “passing the buck” as regards the flags issue.

“It seems no-one is willing to accept responsibility for the erection of flags,” he said.

“But, at the end of the day, someone must take charge of this - after all people are suffering as a result of this intimidating behaviour.”

This week, police chiefs acknowledged that the display of flags was an “emotive” issue.

Assistant Chief Constable Duncan McCausland said: “The flying of flags is not a policing issue alone. The Police Service is just one of the partners involved in the protocol, signed earlier this year, designed to address the flying of flags.

“The responsibility to find a way forward lies with everyone –statutory agencies, elected and community representatives and the communities themselves.”

Asst. Ch. Cons. McCausland said the display of flags to mark out geographical areas or to promote sectarianism or intimidation was “wholly unacceptable in a peaceful and tolerant society.”

Veterans mark end of World War II

BBC

**Following this article, I have re-posted a piece from last year concerning the involvement of the Irish in WWII.

Commemoration events to mark the 60th anniversary of VE and VJ Day have taken place in County Down.

A wreath-laying service was held at the war memorial in Ward Park at the British Legion War Memorial in Bangor.

>>Read on

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

BBC

Irish who fought on the beaches

By Kevin Connolly
BBC Ireland Correspondent
01 June 04

Sixty years on from the anxious summer months of 1944 it is a time for remembering in all the nations that were shaped and scarred by World War II.

There is one European country though where the full picture of what happened during the war is being discovered for the first time.

Neutral Ireland saw no reason to fight against Hitler’s Germany alongside Britain in 1939; it was after all only 18 years since the country had bloodily secured a partial independence from London after centuries of British rule.


Irish volunteers fought in the Second World War

At the time it seemed a reasonable decision, and at the political level neutrality was scrupulously observed.

When the first, still barely believable reports of what had happened in the Nazi concentration camps emerged they were strictly censored.

And the Irish leader Eamon de Valera even paid his respects to the German representative in Dublin when news of Hitler’s death emerged.

Irishmen who had volunteered for Britain’s armies were given a tough time when they were home on leave, and were cold-shouldered after the fighting by a de Valera-led government that didn’t see why they should qualify for state welfare payments when they came home from fighting for a foreign power.

Irish volunteers

The volunteers went into a kind of a historical black hole - largely because Ireland’s official history as taught in school curriculums was always more comfortable with men who had fought against the crown, rather than men who had fought for it.

All that though is changing. The Northern Ireland peace process, designed to improve the country’s future, is also illuminating its past.

First came the rehabilitation of the huge and long-ignored contingent of Irish volunteers from World War I who had been away fighting for Britain while republicans staged the Easter Rising against it in 1916.

When Alex Maskey of Sinn Fein was Lord Mayor of Belfast he even laid a wreath at the city cenotaph - an extraordinary gesture when you consider his party traces its roots directly back to the Easter Rising.

Now, it is the turn of the Irish volunteers who fought in World War II.

Yvonne McEwen, a historian with a special interest in Irish affairs, has now come up with a detailed estimate of the numbers of Irishmen from both sides of the border who fought for Britain.

Based on the War Office calculation that 22 men served for every one who died, she estimates that 99,997 Irishmen volunteered, with the number divided almost evenly between the North and the South.

Fascinating stuff which still has a certain political resonance. After all it suggests that while the government of Ireland may have been neutral, many of its people were not.

Historical storytelling

And it also demonstrates that the supposedly non-combatant Irish Free State contributed as many soldiers as Northern Ireland, a region of the UK whose unionist population prides itself on its loyalty.


Eamon de Valera: Irish leader during war years

In Dublin, the national museum’s splendid buildings at Collins Barracks, built for the British Army during the days of imperial rule, are to house an exhibition on the history of Irish soldiering which will take into account this changing view of the second world war.

It will include the familiar tale of Irish resistance to British rule, but the museum’s curator Lar Joy is actively appealing for uniforms, medals and other memorabilia from Irish volunteers in Britain’s armies so that their story can take its place in the official narrative of Ireland’s place in World War II.

Mr Joy sees the job of running a museum as a form of historical storytelling - I wish people like him had been running museums when I was a child - and getting the volunteer’s contribution into the public domain, is part of getting the overall story right.

For a country whose political establishment rather ludicrously used to insist on speaking not of “World War II” but of “the emergency” as though language alone could keep them out of the conflict, it’s a huge step forward.

And given that that war turned out to be a global moral crusade against fascism rather than just another of Britain’s foreign campaigns, as it may have originally seemed to many in Ireland, it probably suits Irish politicians well enough to discover that their country did after all play a significant role.

*Anyone who may have medals or military memorabilia which might be worth a place in the Irish National Museum’s forthcoming exhibition is invited to contact the curators. Yvonne McEwen is also interested in further contact with Irish Volunteers. Email kevin.connolly@bbc.co.uk and I’ll pass your details on.

US judge raises hopes for Malachy McAllister

Belfast Telegraph

The sister of billionaire Donald Trump is now a US judge who is raising hopes for ex-INLA man Malachy McAllister

By Sean O’Driscoll in New York
newsdesk@belfasttelegraph.co.uk
09 July 2005

A SISTER of billionaire mogul Donald Trump has strengthened the case of a former INLA man fighting deportation from the US.

Judge Maryanne Trump Barry has questioned the deportation of Belfast man, Malachy McAllister and said he didn’t pose a threat to US national security.

During hearings at a Newark federal circuit court in New Jersey, Judge Trump Barry questioned US government lawyers on why McAllister’s involvement in 1981 in an “800 year old war” could threaten US national security in 2005.

She also sought information on why former Attorney General Janet Reno ended deportation cases against six Irish republicans during the Clinton administration.

McAllister’s lawyers showed Judge Trump Barry a statement released by Reno at the time in which she said that she had ended the cases to help the Irish peace process.

A three-judge panel was sitting to hear oral arguments in the case and noted that US anti-terrorism laws may prevent them from taking any action.

Judge Marjorie Rendell, a wife of Pennsylvania governor, Ed Rendell, agreed with McAllister’s Belfast-born lawyer, Eamonn Dornan that US immigration law’s definition of “terrorist” is “extremely broad,” and included acts that “none of us would consider terrorist.”

However, Government lawyer John McAdams Jr argued that an exception for McAllister could open the floodgates and assist those involved in attacks against the US.

McAllister was convicted in 1983 for involvement in the attempted murder of RUC officer Gregory Conway. He and his family fled Belfast after a loyalist attack on their home in 1988 and came to the US in 1996.

His wife, Bernadette, died of cancer last year after she and two of her children won the right to stay in the US.

McAllister has argued that it has been unsafe for him to return to Northern Ireland since the 1988 attack, when a loyalist paramilitary gang fired 26 shots into his south Belfast home.

Attorney Dornan said that he was very pleased with the oral arguments but said that the court’s power to act may be hampered by sweeping federal anti-terrorism laws.

Republican Sinn Féin - Cork Launch Website.

Indymedia Ireland

by Séan O’Murchú PRO - MacCurtain/McSwiney Cumann Republican Sinn Féin Cork
Saturday, Jul 9 2005, 3:58pm
address: http://www.rsfcork.com

The MacCurtain / McSwiney Cumann of Republicam Sinn Féin Cork Ireland have launched a new website at www.rsfcork.com.

This site gives Republican Sinn Féin in Cork the ability to voice its views on the continuing illigal British occupation in Ireland. As well as commenting on matters of daily revelance to Irish people with weekly news updates.

Below is a outline of who Republican Sinn Féin are and what they represent.

Republican Sinn Féin, the last remaining true Republican political party founded in 1905. Reformed in 1986 out of the walkout of the 86 Ard-Fheis by the true Republican leadership, who saw the failure of the new Provisional leaderships’s decision to enter into a partitonist assembly of the 26 County Southern Free State. This one day would lead to a larger erosion of Republican principles, to the acceptance of entering a new Stormont and acceptance of British Partition. Republican Sinn Fein uphold the right of the Irish people to oppose continued British occupation in Ireland. We are dealing with state sponsored censorship and are continually demonized in the media, with harassment of our members carried out by the States “Political Police” on both sides of the British imposed Border.

Republicans today are labeled as anti-peace or portrayed militarists. Anyone who becomes arrested for political offenses is now either purposely ignored, demonized in the media, or criminalized. In the north the British have brought back the denial of Political Status, 17 years after the 1981 hunger strikes. In 1981 Bobby Sands and nine other republican POWs died in the cell blocks of Long Kesh on hunger strike to win POW Status for all Republican POWs.

In Short the present climate is one in which the Republican Movement finds itself struggling against enormous odds, but like all other times of seeming defeat, retreat, or disillusionment, this too shall pass, for its only noble and righteous ideas which live on. As it has been said, You can Kill - or as today’s lessons have taught us, even buy-out the revolutionary, but you cannot kill the Revolution.

Therefore this movement will have to be one built upon a strong and solidly principled foundation, built with planning, organization, and structure with a clear purpose and direction to achieve the end goal of a New Ireland ( Éire Nua ) free of British rule.

Republican Sinn Féin believes that the historic Irish nation is a distinct, coherent unit and is entitled to exercise its own independence. Because of the history of our own country we identify with national liberation struggles around the world.

We believe, in the words of one of the 18th Century founders of Irish Republicanism, Wolfe Tone, in the urgent need to “break the connection with England, the never-failing source of all our political evils”. We stand for the complete overthrow of British rule in Ireland and the establishment of a Federal Democratic Socialist Republic based on the Proclamation of 1916.

To bring the Proclamation of the Republic, declared in Easter 1916 into effective operation and to maintain and consolidate the Government of the Republic, representative of the people of all Ireland, based on that Proclamation.

To establish in the Republic a reign of social justice based on Irish Republican socialist principles in accordance with the Proclamation of the Republic of 1916, the Democratic Program of the First Dial Éireann in 1919, by a just distributation of the nation’s wealth and resources and to institute a system of government suited to the particular needs of the people.

To establish the Irish langauge as the primary means of communication in the Republic. To teach Irish History in such a way as will foster a pride in our own cultural heritage, and a sense of rights and responsibilities in our people as citizens of the Republic.

Suspect device found in Co Tyrone

RTE

09 July 2005 14:05

The area around the police station in Coalisland in Co Tyrone has been sealed off following the discovery of a suspect device.

Elsewhere in Co Tyrone, shopkeepers in Dungannon and Cookstown have been advised to check their premises.

It follows warnings that incendiary bombs may have been left in the shops.

South-east says farewell to Tall Ships

BreakingNews.ie

09/07/2005 - 15:27:24


Photo: Haydn West/PA

Tens of thousands of people lined the Waterford Estuary today as the Tall Ships sailed off in formation for the start of the 2005 race series.

The seized every possible vantage point as the magnificent vessels, most with their sails up, passed down the River Suir in formation to Dunmore East for the pre-race Parade of Sail.

The 86 Tall Ships were joined by a flotilla of smaller vessels as they made their way towards the open sea.

The Parade of Sail formally kicks off the 2005 race series with its first leg to Cherbourg-Octeville in France.

Visitors watched the spectacle from both sides of the estuary ahead of the race start at 3pm.

Hundreds of thousands of people have turned out in recent days to see the vessels birthed in Waterford Port.

A spokeswoman for the event said the atmosphere had been “brilliant” with spectators treated to parades, an Air Corps fly-by and fireworks display as part of the free festival.

Gardaí estimated the fireworks display alone in the city on Friday night was watched by 130,000.

They reported no major incidents.

The ships have come from countries around the globe including France, Uruguay, the USA, Bulgaria, India, Indonesia, Russia, Germany, Netherlands, UK, Poland, Finland, Belgium, Latvia, Portugal, Spain and Norway.

One of the three Irish ships taking part, the sail training vessel Asgard II, was given the honour of leading the sail past down the river.

Orangemen go on march in Donegal

BBC

Members of the Protestant Orange Order have taken part in an annual pre-Twelfth parade in County Donegal.

The Rossnowlagh parade brought together Orangemen from the border counties of Donegal, Monaghan, Cavan and Leitrim as well as many from Northern Ireland.

Joined by loyal order members from Liverpool, Orangemen and bands marched along a one-mile route into the village before a religious service.

The Orange Order had expected between 50 and 60 lodges to take part.

Twenty lodges belong to the Orange Order in Donegal, but it said there had been a steady increase in new members in recent times.

The demonstration is known for its relaxed and peaceful atmosphere and has been problem-free in previous years.

There is none of the security seen at some marches in Northern Ireland, despite Rossnowlagh being a mainly Catholic area.

The march comes three days ahead of the annual 12 July celebrations across Northern Ireland to mark the anniversary of the 1690 Battle of the Boyne.

Tuesday is the biggest day in the Protestant marching season.






















Get free blog up and running in minutes with Blogsome | Theme designs available here